"I am full of others, too," the first of the two new composing this book is narrated by Juliette, a girl that are seemingly autistic. Stuffed OCD, she spends most of his time in a foster home and never speaks. Sometimes just, it criiiiiiiiie. People believe the weak; Juliette only obeys a different logic than most of them. She lives in a world where she can walk on small tiles but where are the big jokes, where scratches are permitted but only on glasses, to go left is dangerous, where he takes things and banging your head against the walls to prevent a horrible event from happening. By cons, rabbits, she has the right.
Juliet takes a lucid and sometimes acerbic look at his surroundings; she experiences strong emotions but does not know the express conventionally. "It's all stuck kisses on my mouth as words not come out. The kisses too big to get out, so it goes to my feet in my hands. And I type I claw." A wall stands between her and the rest of the world; Yet his strength of character does not invite pity, but rather to wonder. Juliet asks how soft you draw and why everything is always so difficult. Juliette believes that if she was able to take the bracelet hanging on the arm of a mannequin he is to her, because "I have given me trouble anyway. I won it. (...) No I not loose. "
Juliette exhausts adults responsible for caring for her. And if we could put ourselves in their place, we would surely understand their confusion. But this is impossible, because the time of reading, the inner voice of Juliet stands out as the only reality. His imagination is the cage which she can not escape the bubble-hermetic universe she created and where it locks us with it. The worst part is that we did not want to leave, not at all want to leave this singular child at the end of the 70 pages that hard "I am full of others, too."
The new second, which gives its title to "dog perched theory" is narrated by Stephen, a simple-minded comes to himself after his mother's death and the disappearance of his brother. Finding the human life too difficult, he decided to become a dog. But the roof of his doghouse prevents him from thinking, probably by stopping the thoughts that God sends him ... Again, we enter into the head of someone "different", and here too, it is rarely attempted feeling sorry for himself. The author demonstrated enormous talent to present the daily life of the two characters in an offbeat angle, but without any sordid or with some realistic poetry. A reading which is humanly richer spring.