“He was a well-educated, successful, thirty-five-year-old business owner who was sardonic, easily stressed, and disillusioned with the human race. He didn’t like children and he made fun of old people. His laundry list of phobias included drinking tap water, walking through grocery stores, and driving on highways. He smoked too much and suffered incapacitating panic attacks. Yet as founder of Stray Rescue in St. Louis, he spent his days chasing wild, injured, diseased dogs that no one else would touch.” Dog Rescue Book:The Man Who Talks to Dogs: The Story of Randy Grim and His Fight to Save America's Abandoned Dogs Source: The Man Who Talks to Dogs: The Story of Randy Grim and His Fight to Save America's Abandoned Dogs