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| | The SF Site Featured Review: Dog Eat Dog |
 | | In Top Dog, William "Bogey" Ingersoll, a bloodthirsty corporate raider whose huge fortune has been made by gutting businesses and putting thousands of people out of work, wakes up one day in another world, transformed into a dog. |
 | | When Dog Eat Dog opens, Bogey is back in his own body in his own world, a changed man. He's given up corporate thuggery, made his estate a home for stray dogs, and plans to give away his entire fortune to worthy causes. |
 | | Like Inhuman Beings, Dog Eat Dog is a bizarre blending of themes and styles, combining over-the-top parody, thriller-like suspense, and some pretty trenchant observations about God, the universe, the nature of evil, and the psychology of dogs. |
| www.sfsite.com /02a/dog50.htm (790 words) |
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