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160 pages, Paperback
First published January 1, 2005
Roald Dahl – who at the time of his death was writing a novel about a man and his dog who can talk to each other.
Ernest Hemingway – loved his black Labrador gundog that accompanied him in his hunting trips in Cuba.
P. G. Wodehouse – who said at his twilight years that life for him was complete with two real friends, a regular supply of books and his dog Peke.
Ian Fleming – loved his two mongrels who keep by his side while he wrote his James Bond novels.
James Ellroy – one time said that dogs are an obsession for him.
Philip Pullman – who takes home abandoned dogs on the streets.
Truman Capote – who was gifted a bulldog by Humphrey Bogart after their arm wrestle. Effeminate Capote won.
J. R. Ackerley – immortalized his German shepherd Queenie in his novel My Dog Tulip which Christopher Isherwood called “one of the greatest masterpieces of animal literature.”
Tom Wolfe – who lives with dogs and he uses dog characters in his novel to describe a character or a situation. Think of the scene in his Bonfire of the Vanities where the Park Avenue liberal Sherman McCoy has one of the most fashionable dogs of the day, a dachshund, comically named Marshall, whom he drags out in the pouring rain as a pretext when he wants to phone his mistress.