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Doctor Dolittle's Post Office: Illustrated…
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Doctor Dolittle's Post Office: Illustrated by the Author (1923 original; edición 1923)

por Hugh Lofting (Autor)

Series: Doctor Dolittle (5)

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432558,525 (3.66)12
Doctor Dolittle establishes a swallow mail service for the animals when he discovers that they have their own way of writing.
Miembro:Nohosky
Título:Doctor Dolittle's Post Office: Illustrated by the Author
Autores:Hugh Lofting (Autor)
Información:Frederick A. Stokes Company- 1st Edition 359 pages
Colecciones:Tu biblioteca
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La oficina de correos del doctor dolittle por Hugh Lofting (1923)

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Mostrando 5 de 5
A really imaginative, fun and weird story or set of stories, but the multiple stories all make sense in the larger narrative. Its just really quite good. ( )
  wreade1872 | Nov 28, 2021 |
The Hugh Lofting Doctor Dolittle stories are classics that stand the test of time. I really enjoy them and find them clever and enjoyable. I think the writing can be seen as a bit dated but I think it's still extremely readable. ( )
  KateKat11 | Sep 24, 2021 |
I'm sure I read this back in about 5th grade, which was pretty much back in the dark ages. I loved Doctor Doolittle before he got swallowed up by Hollywood. In the past couple of years, I've reread the first two of the Doctor Doolittle books. They were charming stories, albeit rather racist. Whatever, I decided to read the next one on the list despite the racism.

There's a lot to like about this book. On the other hand, it does meander and seems to lack focus. I'm not sure Lofting knew where he was going, so he just made stuff up and ended up with lots of interesting vignettes, but not a coherent whole.

Doctor Doolittle and friends are headed back to England after having visited Africa. They come upon a woman weeping in a canoe and stop to help. It seems her husband was sold into slavery, so the Doctor goes off to help capture the slave traders, something he does with the help of a British Man o' War he bumps into by accident, and also some swallow friends, who act as scouts. When they get the woman and her husband reunited, Doctor Doolittle and friends take her home. When they get there, they learn that the woman had written the king asking him not to sell her husband, but the king never got the letter, because the post office in his country wasn't properly organized. So Doctor Doolittle sets up a well-organized and reliable post office that uses migrating birds to carry the mails. Well, at one point and another, the good doctor also sets up a weather bureau, helps an impoverished kingdom gain riches by way of a pearl fishery, protects the same impoverished kingdom from the depredations of rampaging amazons (I'm not sure how it is that Amazons, i.e. big, strong, active women—kind of like the Williams sisters—are to be found in Africa, despite the fact that "The Amazon" is in South America), visits an ancient turtle who personally witnessed the Flood in the Noah and the Ark story (never mind that that flood took place in the Middle East, not Africa), and so forth. It's just one thing sort of leading to another without plan (kind of like my sentence structure).

So, anyway, this is a quite good read. It's probably a better read for 10-year olds who aren't so picky about having things make sense. On the other hand, there are little bits of wry humor in some of the events and asides that aren't likely to be properly understood except by more mature readers (e.g. a quip about "pearls before swine"). ( )
  lgpiper | Jun 21, 2019 |
NA
  pszolovits | Feb 3, 2021 |
Good condition
  JamesLemons | Apr 23, 2020 |
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Nearly all of the history of Doctor Dolittle's post office took place when he was returning from a voyage to West Africa.
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Doctor Dolittle establishes a swallow mail service for the animals when he discovers that they have their own way of writing.

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