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Soldier Dog

Sam Angus

Plot Summary

Soldier Dog

Sam Angus

Fiction | Novel | Middle Grade | Published in 2010

Plot Summary
Soldier Dog is a young adult novel by Sam Angus. Set in 1917, the penultimate year of World War I, it concerns a young man named Stanley who runs away from home and enlists in the army to find his older brother, Tom. Stanley is made a keeper of specially trained canines that relay messages to the front lines of battle and back to army commanders. While deployed in Europe, he learns that his own dog, Soldier, has been deployed as well, and desperately tries to restore his family. The novel is a sympathetic portrait of the dissolution of families during a war of unprecedented scale and suffering.

The novel begins in May of 1917. World War I has raged for three years, and there is no end in sight. Stanley, a 14 year old in the rural U.S., is too young for the draft, and spends his days with his father, tending the horses and dogs that live on the family farm. He is a somewhat lonely child, and considers his closest friend to be his father’s greyhound, Rocket.

One day, Stanley accidentally lets Rocket escape the farm. When she returns, she is found to be pregnant. Stanley’s father, enraged at Stanley’s carelessness, becomes emotionally cold to him, hurting their relationship. The tension increases more when he decides to sell all of their dogs except one named Soldier, who Stanley named for Tom when he went off to battle in France. Stanley and his father fight, and his father takes Soldier, announcing that he will drown him. In despair, Stanley decides to run away from home and find Tom. He manages to enlist in the army by faking his age. The army places him in the regiment of the Royal Engineer, where he is put to work taking care of horses.



At training, Stanley makes two friends, brothers Hamish and James McManus, as well as a young man named Fidget. He gets a chance to switch to the Messenger Dog Service and work as Keeper Ryder. He decides to join and is assigned a Great Dane named Bones. He undergoes rigorous canine training, which includes teaching Bones to faithfully obey him and memorize his voice. As the war worsens, Stanley is deployed in Etaples, France. After a valiant run, Stanley is brought back from the front lines when Bones dies in a gas attack.

Bones’ death devastates Stanley, and he declines further missions to take messenger dogs. He agrees after being given an extremely loyal mixed breed named Pistol. He receives a letter from Tom ordering him to leave the army, but refuses. Shortly after, he is horrified to learn that his father has enlisted to find him. He suddenly transforms from being resentful of his father to wanting to protect him. Stanley goes to the British HQ Signal station, where he learns that Tom’s regiment is trapped in a nearby village. He receives a letter from his father, relaying that he had enlisted Soldier in the Messenger Dog Service. After receiving Soldier’s identification number, 2176, he is astonished to see that it is his own dog, Pistol.

Stanley sets out again with Soldier to rescue Tom, risking the lives of himself and his dog. Both of them fall victim to another gas attack: Stanley is temporarily blinded and sent to the hospital, while Soldier disappears. When Stanley regains his sight, he finds that his father has returned with Tom and Soldier. Reunited, they return to England.



Soldier Dog represents the struggles of many underage boys in England who enlisted in the army for a multitude of reasons. Angus paints a compelling story of one boy’s indispensable perseverance to recover his family.

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