

In short, this modern classic of 20th century literature subsumes our bourgeois preconceptions in a tale of real drama and urgency, a creative maelstrom in which modern angst is conceptualised in canine form. Will your loved ones recognise your rights to make the choices you have? Will they even recognise you after the upheavals of your personal transition/journey.Ībove all this book lets you know that running away from home can be kinda fun. When can indignities (such as baths) be imposed upon the young or upon minorities (Scotties), and when is it time to stand up to authority and say "No!" (or "woof"). If I identify as a black dog with white spots (or by extension the ying to any yang be it gender, sexuality, or some more esoteric quality) can I not change? Can the leopard (or Scotty dog) change its spots? Gene Zion cunningly disguised one of the great existential questions of our age in this Dirty Harry book.ĭo I have to remain how I was born. Margaret Bloy Graham completed the artwork for this new edition of Harry the Dirty Dog at her home in Cambridge, Massachusetts. She also wrote and illustrated such favorites as Be Nice to Spiders. Margaret Bloy Graham has illustrated two Caldecott Honor Books: Gene Zion's All Falling Down (1952) and Charlotte Zolotow's The Storm Book (1953). Gene Zion, who died in 1975, will always be remembered for his playful children's stories. Harry the Dirty Dog was followed by No Roses for Harry!, Harry and the Lady Next Door, and Harry by the Sea. Gene Zion and Margaret Bloy Graham collaborated on four picture books featuring the enormously popular white dog with black spots. The artist has added splashes of color to the cheerful scenes for this welcome new edition. Whether he's a white dog with black spots, or a black dog with white spots, Harry is sure to steal your hear (and your scrub brush, too, if you're not careful).įirst published in 1956, this beloved classic is a collaboration between Gene Zion and two-time Caldecott Honor winner Margaret Bloy Graham. There's never been another dog as delightful-or dirty-as Harry.
