The Big New Yorker Book of Dogs

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The Big New Yorker Book of Dogs Page 52

by The New Yorker Magazine


  JONATHAN LETHEM is the author of almost twenty books of fiction and nonfiction, including The Ecstasy of Influence, The Fortress of Solitude, Chronic City, and Motherless Brooklyn, which won the National Book Critics Circle Award for fiction.

  A. J. LIEBLING (1904–1963) joined the staff of The New Yorker in 1935. During World War II he was a correspondent in Europe and Africa. After the war he wrote the magazine’s “Wayward Press” column for many years. His other subjects included boxing, food, and horse racing.

  ELIZABETH MACKLIN is the author of two poetry collections, A Woman Kneeling in the Big City and You’ve Just Been Told, and is the translator of the Basque writer Kirmen Uribe’s Meanwhile Take My Hand.

  BEN MCGRATH has been a staff writer at The New Yorker since 2003. He writes frequently for The Talk of the Town and also writes about sports for the magazine.

  REBECCA MEAD joined The New Yorker as a staff writer in 1997. She has written articles on a wide range of topics, including legalized prostitution, the spring-break business, and God-based diet programs. She is the author of One Perfect Day.

  ARTHUR MILLER (1915–2005) was one of the most celebrated American playwrights of the twentieth century. His works include All My Sons, The Crucible, and Death of a Salesman, which won a Pulitzer Prize.

  OGDEN NASH (1902–1971) published his first poem in The New Yorker in 1930, and they continued to appear in the magazine for the rest of his life. His books include I’m a Stranger Here Myself, Bed Riddance, and Good Intentions.

  SUSAN ORLEAN began contributing articles and Talk of the Town pieces to The New Yorker in 1987 and became a staff writer in 1992. She is the author of The Orchid Thief, The Bullfighter Checks Her Makeup, My Kind of Place, and Rin Tin Tin.

  CATHLEEN SCHINE is the author of several novels, including Rameau’s Niece, The Love Letter, She Is Me, The New Yorkers, and The Three Weissmanns of Westport.

  ANNE SEXTON (1928–1974) was an American poet. Her books include To Bedlam and Part Way Back, The Awful Rowing Toward God, and Live or Die, which won a Pulitzer Prize.

  JIM SHEPARD is a novelist and short story writer. His collection Like You’d Understand, Anyway won the Story Prize and was nominated for the National Book Award. His other books include Project X and You Think That’s Bad.

  CHARLES SIMIC is a poet, essayist, and translator and served as the United States poet laureate in 2007–2008. His books include My Noiseless Entourage, That Little Something, and Master of Disguises.

  DAVE SMITH is an American poet, novelist, and critic whose books include Hunting Men, The Wick of Memory, Hawks on Wires, and Little Boats, Unsalvaged. He is the co-editor of Afield: American Writers on Bird Dogs.

  RUTH STONE (1915–2011) was the author of many books of poetry, including In the Dark, Ordinary Words, and What Love Comes To.

  MARK STRAND was the United States poet laureate in 1990–1991. His books include Blizzard of One, Man and Camel, and Almost Invisible.

  WISLAWA SZYMBORSKA (1923–2012) was a Polish poet and the winner of the 1996 Nobel Prize in Literature. Her books include Here, People on a Bridge, and View with a Grain of Sand.

  DOROTHEA TANNING (1910–2012) was an American artist and writer. Her books include Between Lives, A Table of Content, and Coming to That.

  JAMES TATE is an American poet. His collection Worshipful Company of Fletchers won a National Book Award and his Selected Poems won a Pulitzer Prize.

  JAMES THURBER (1894–1961) joined The New Yorker in 1927 as an editor and writer; his idiosyncratic cartoons began to appear there four years later. His books include two children’s classics—The 13 Clocks and The Wonderful O—and an autobiography, My Life and Hard Times.

  CALVIN TOMKINS has been a staff writer for The New Yorker since 1960. His books include The Bride and the Bachelors, Living Well Is the Best Revenge, and Lives of the Artists.

  JEFFREY TOOBIN has been a staff writer for The New Yorker since 1993. His books include The Oath, The Nine, A Vast Conspiracy, The Run of His Life, and Too Close to Call.

  GEORGE W. S. TROW (1943–2006) first wrote for The New Yorker in 1966 and co-founded National Lampoon in 1970. He is the author of a novel, The City in the Mist, and a collection of satirical short stories, Bullies.

  JOHN UPDIKE (1932–2009) contributed fiction, poetry, essays, and criticism to The New Yorker for half a century. He published twenty-three novels, including the Pulitzer Prize–winning Rabbit Is Rich and Rabbit at Rest, seventeen books of short stories, eight collections of poetry, five children’s books, a memoir, and a play.

  MONA VAN DUYN (1921–2004) was an American poet. Her books include To See, to Take, which won a National Book Award, and Near Changes, which won a Pulitzer Prize. She was the United States poet laureate in 1992–1993.

  STEPHANIE VAUGHN is the author of the short-story collection Sweet Talk. She teaches creative writing at Cornell University.

  E. B. WHITE (1899–1985) joined the staff of The New Yorker in 1927. He wrote the children’s classics Stuart Little, Charlotte’s Web, and The Trumpet of the Swan. He received the Presidential Medal of Freedom in 1963 and was awarded an honorary Pulitzer Prize in 1978 for his work as a whole.

  CALLAN WINK received his MFA from the University of Wyoming and is completing a novel, Beartooth.

  ALEXANDER WOOLLCOTT (1887–1943) joined The New York Times in 1909 and was a feared and famous drama critic there from 1914 to 1922. A central figure at the Algonquin Round Table in the 1920s, he was one of the first contributors to The New Yorker.

  KEVIN YOUNG is the author of several books of poetry, including Most Way Home, For the Confederate Dead, and Ardency.

  “It’s very gratifying, but there’s a lot of responsibility that goes along with it.”

  ILLUSTRATION CREDITS

  tp: James Thurber, copyright © 1964 by Rosemary A. Thurber. Reprinted by arrangement with Rosemary A. Thurber and The Barbara Hogenson Agency. All rights reserved.

  col1.1: John Siskin

  frw.1: Previously unpublished James Thurber illustration “Thurber Dog with Butterfly for Nora” copyright © 1937. Reprinted by arrangement with Rosemary A. Thurber and The Barbara Hogenson Agency. All rights reserved. “Thurber Dog with Butterfly for Nora” is courtesy of the Rare Books and Manuscripts Library at the Ohio State University Libraries and was a gift of Nora Sayre.

  1.1: James Thurber

  1.2: James Thurber

  1.3: Photograph of E. B. White and Katharine White (and Minnie), reprinted courtesy of the Estate of E. B. White.

  2.1: Jules Feiffer

  3.1: Mark Ulriksen

  3.2: Edward Sorel

  4.1: Platon

  4.2: Mary Petty

  5.1: Zohar Lazar

  5.2: Mary Petty

  5.3: Handwritten draft of “Great Dog Poem No. 2” by Mark Strand, reprinted courtesy of the author and The Lilly Library, Indiana University, Bloomington, Indiana.

  6.1: Mark Ulriksen

  7.1: James Thurber

  7.2: Anatol Kovarsky

  8.1: Jules Feiffer

  9.1: Martin Schoeller

  9.2: Landon Nordeman

  10.1: John Sann

  11.1: Jules Feiffer

  11.2: Mark Ulriksen

  12.1: Typescript drafts of “Tennis Ball” by Donald Hall reproduced courtesy of the author and the Milne Special Collections, University of New Hampshire Library.

  13.1: Typescript of “Chablis” by Donald Barthelme, Donald Barthelme Literary Papers, Special Collections, University of Houston Libraries. Copyright © 1983 by Donald Barthelme (The Wylie Agency LLC).

  14.1: Hermina Selz

  14.2: Helene E. Hokinson

  14.3: Ana Juan

  p03.1: Valerie Shaff

  15.1: James Thurber

  16.1: Getty Images, Inc.

  16.2: Getty Images, Inc.

  17.1: Peter Arno

  18.1: Splash News

  18.2: Mark Ulriksen

  19.1: Constantin Alajalov

  20.1: Elliott
Erwitt/Magnum Photos

  20.2: Manuscript and typescript drafts of “The Unruly Thoughts of the Dog Trainer’s Lover” by Elizabeth Macklin reproduced courtesy of the author.

  20.3: Ward Schumaker

  20.4: Typescript of “Monologue of a Dog Ensnared in History” by Wislawa Szymborska reproduced courtesy of the the Wislawa Szymborska Foundation.

  21.1: William Wegman, Ray Cat (1978)

  21.2: Galley page of “Dogology” by T. Coraghessan Boyle

  21.3: Eric Drooker

  21.4: Mark Ulriksen

  22.1: Manuscript page from “Dog Race” by Roald Dahl © RDNL. Courtesy of The Roald Dahl Museum and Story Centre.

  22.2: Barry Blitt

  23.1: Illustration by James Thurber of “The Departure of Emma Inch” from The Middle-Aged Man on the Flying Trapeze. Copyright © 1935 by Rosemary A. Thurber. Reprinted by arrangement with Rosemary A. Thurber and The Barbara Hogenson Agency. All rights reserved.

  24.1: Landon Nordeman

  24.2: William Steig

  25.1: Photograph by Jacques Henri Lartigue © Ministère de la Culture—France/A.A.J.H.L.

  25.2: Peter de Sève

  26.3: John Cuneo

  27.1: Typescript pages from “The Dog” by Roddy Doyle reprinted courtesy of the author and the National Library of Ireland.

  27.3: Maira Kalman

  28.1: Typescript of “Line and Tree” by A. J. Liebling reproduced courtesy of the Estate of A. J. Liebling and the Division of Rare and Manuscript Collections, Cornell University Library. Copyright © 1949 by A. J. Liebling (The Wylie Agency LLC).

  29.1: Peter Arno

  34.1: James Thurber

  34.2, 34.3: James Thurber postcard to Harold Ross reproduced courtesy of Rosemary A. Thurber and New Yorker Records, Manuscripts and Archives Division, The New York Public Library, Astor, Lenox and Tilden Foundations.

  Cartoons by Charles Addams (3.3, 21.5, 24.3), Peter Arno (33.5), Charles Barsotti (5.4, 6.2, 13.2, 27.5, 29.2, 33.2), Harry Bliss (11.3, 21.6), George Booth (col2.2, 6.3, 11.4, 33.2), David Borchart (18.3), Roz Chast (10.2, 30.1), Tom Cheney (16.3), Leo Cullum (11.5, 14.4, 18.4, 18.5, 22.3, 31.2), Chon Day (25.3), Robert Day (3.4), Edward Frascino (4.3), Alex Gregory (9.3, 25.5, 31.1), J. B. Handelsman (26.1), Pete Holmes (16.4), Bruce Eric Kaplan (11.6, 19.2, 33.3), Anatol Kovarsky (5.5), Arnie Levin (2.2, 20.5), Eric Lewis (22.4), Lee Lorenz (21.7, 29.3), Robert Mankoff (25.3), Michael Maslin (24.4), Warren Miller (22.5), Paul Noth (33.1), John O’Brien (22.6), Mischa Richter (34.4), Victoria Roberts (27.4), Al Ross (20.6), Danny Shanahan (4.4, 9.4, 14.5, 22.7, 25.4, 26.1, 26.4, 30.2), Bernard Schoenbaum (28.3), David Sipress (28.2), Otto Soglow (3.5), Saul Steinberg (2.3, 14.6), Peter Steiner (12.2, 22.9), Mick Stevens (toc.1), James Thurber (7.3, 15.2, 23.2), Tom Toro (26.2), Mike Twohy (14.7, 27.2), Robert Weber (2.4–2.5, 28.4), Bill Woodman (22.8), Jack Ziegler (18.6, 22.9)

  Spot art by Tom Bachtell, Charles Barsotti, Abe Birnbaum, George Booth, Devera Ehrenberg, Ian Falconer, Lee Lorenz, Daniel Maja, Mariscal, Eugene Mihaesco, Emmanuel Pierre, Ronald Searle, Otto Soglow, Ralph Steadman, James Thurber, Philippe Weisbecker.

 

 

 


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