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The Dog Department: James Thurber on Hounds, Scotties, and Talking Poodles

por James Thurber

Otros autores: Michael J. Rosen

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432590,119 (3.93)2
"On the lawns and porches, and in the living rooms and backyards of my threescore years, there have been more dogs, written and drawn, real and imaginary, than I had guessed before I started this roundup." Here is James Thurber, arguably the greatest humorist of the twentieth century, on all things canine. In The Dog Department, Michael J. Rosen, a literary dogcatcher of sorts, has gathered together Thurber's best in show. Here we have the stylish prose and drawings from Thurber's Dogs (which connected the words "Thurber" and "Dog" as inseparably as "Bartlett" and "Quotation," as "Emily Post" and "Etiquette"), along with unpublished material from the Thurber archives, a great sheaf of uncollected cartoons, and two dozen "Talk of the Town" miniatures from The New Yorker -- the consummate dog book from an artist of extraordinary pedigree. What other author can claim to have penned his own personal breed? The Thurber hound is a creature as unmistakable as Disney's mouse or Playboy's bunny. In The Dog Department you'll find standard poodles, Scottish terriers, an Airedale, a rough collie, an American Staffordshire terrier -- all Thurber family members who inspired quintessential dog tales. For instance, there's Muggs, "the dog that bit people," an avocation that, each year, required Thurber's mother to send her famous chocolates to an ever-growing list of Muggs's victims. There's also a fair share about bloodhounds, German shepherd dogs, and pugs. But what you'll find remarkable and comforting is that reading Thurber from fifty or even seventy-five years ago is akin to reading about dogs today -- or about dogs from the previous century, as Thurber grew up reading -- or about dogs, we hope, from this new century we've just entered. The Dog Department is proof that Thurber's work defines the canine canon.… (más)
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While generally very enjoyable, as Thurber's works are, I found this collection of essays on dogs a little uneven. There were some snippets that absolutely made me laugh out loud, others that warranted a chuckle, and others that I just wanted to get through. If I had it to do over, I'd skip the ones that didn't strike me and savor the ones that did. 3.5 stars. ( )
  Connie-D | Jan 17, 2016 |
A hilarious collection of essays, drawings, and short anecdotes about dogs. Thurber writes about dogs like he's writing about people, and intersperses the humor with actual facts about the background of certain breeds, the training of bloodhounds, and his experiences with his own dogs' personalities. It's obvious he was a HUGE dog fan, and it's a delight to read his writing about them. Bonus: There is a "flip-book" in the lower right hand corner of a dog following a bug! ( )
  tloeffler | Jun 4, 2009 |
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Nombre del autorRolTipo de autor¿Obra?Estado
James Thurberautor principaltodas las edicionescalculado
Rosen, Michael J.autor secundariotodas las edicionesconfirmado
Debes iniciar sesión para editar los datos de Conocimiento Común.
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Título original
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Dedicatoria
Información procedente del conocimiento común inglés. Edita para encontrar en tu idioma.
For Sara, Greg, and Mark, and for Lulu, a German wirehaired pointer, the newest Thurber great-granddog.
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"On the lawns and porches, and in the living rooms and backyards of my threescore years, there have been more dogs, written and drawn, real and imaginary, than I had guessed before I started this roundup." Here is James Thurber, arguably the greatest humorist of the twentieth century, on all things canine. In The Dog Department, Michael J. Rosen, a literary dogcatcher of sorts, has gathered together Thurber's best in show. Here we have the stylish prose and drawings from Thurber's Dogs (which connected the words "Thurber" and "Dog" as inseparably as "Bartlett" and "Quotation," as "Emily Post" and "Etiquette"), along with unpublished material from the Thurber archives, a great sheaf of uncollected cartoons, and two dozen "Talk of the Town" miniatures from The New Yorker -- the consummate dog book from an artist of extraordinary pedigree. What other author can claim to have penned his own personal breed? The Thurber hound is a creature as unmistakable as Disney's mouse or Playboy's bunny. In The Dog Department you'll find standard poodles, Scottish terriers, an Airedale, a rough collie, an American Staffordshire terrier -- all Thurber family members who inspired quintessential dog tales. For instance, there's Muggs, "the dog that bit people," an avocation that, each year, required Thurber's mother to send her famous chocolates to an ever-growing list of Muggs's victims. There's also a fair share about bloodhounds, German shepherd dogs, and pugs. But what you'll find remarkable and comforting is that reading Thurber from fifty or even seventy-five years ago is akin to reading about dogs today -- or about dogs from the previous century, as Thurber grew up reading -- or about dogs, we hope, from this new century we've just entered. The Dog Department is proof that Thurber's work defines the canine canon.

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