Lee Charles Kelley is an American novelist and dog trainer living in Manhattan.
Kelley is the author of six detective novels featuring Jack Field, an NYPD homicide cop who loves dogs and hates people, so he takes early retirement, moves to Maine, and buys a boarding and training kennel, hoping to get away from crimesolving. However, he falls in love with a part-time medical examiner, Dr. Jamie Cutter, and gets drawn back into detective work. Together the couple, along with their loyal canine companions, track down and catch the bad guys.
Kelley's novels are best described as a combination of murder mystery, romantic comedy, and dog training manuals, as they include comic, sometimes even farcical scenes, along with dog training tips, all woven into the mystery and suspense.
His critiques of the alpha theory and operant conditioning have made him a somewhat controversial figure in the dog world, which eventually led to an invitation from the editors of Psychology Todayhttp://www.psychologytoday.com/ to write a blog on canine training and behavior for their website. The blog was titled "My Puppy, My Self" and ran from April, 2009 to February 2013, garnering nearly half-a-million views.
The training philosophy and techniques Kelley uses are based on a methodology created by Kevin Behan http://naturaldogtraining.com/kevin-behan/, author of Natural Dog Training http://naturaldogtraining.com/category/articles/ and Your Dog Is Your Mirror. (Behan's father was John M. Behan https://select.nytimes.com/gst/abstract.html?res=FB0717F83F541A7B93C1A8178DD85F478685F9&scp=1&sq=john%20behan&st=cse, a legendary K-9 Corps trainer during World War II, and the author of Dogs of Warhttps://openlibrary.org/b/OL6496100M/Dogs-of-war.)
Kelley's first dog, Charley, was featured on NBC's Late Night with David Letterman in a recurring segment titled "Charlie [sic] the Bubble-Eating Dog (who never ate bubbles)," which ran between 1989 and 1990. Charley's first appearance in the skit coincided with Julia Roberts' first appearance on Late Night.