What animal is Dodsworth?

What animal is Dodsworth?

Included within this number is the Dodsworth series that features a menagerie of silly animals including cows, pigs, dogs, cats, a feisty duck and, of course, the leading “man” Dodsworth, a distinguished rat in a fedora, who travels to exotic cities around the globe in search of adventure.

Who wrote Dodsworth?

Sinclair LewisDodsworth / AuthorHarry Sinclair Lewis was an American writer and playwright. In 1930, he became the first writer from the United States to receive the Nobel Prize in Literature, which was awarded “for his vigorous and graphic art of description and his ability to create, with wit and humor, new types of characters.” Wikipedia

When was Dodsworth published?

March 14, 1929Dodsworth / Originally published

What does Dodsworth mean?

Dodsworth Name Meaning English: habitational name for someone from Dodworth in West Yorkshire (recorded as Dodeswrde in Domesday Book), which is named from the Old English personal name Dodd(a) + Old English wor{dh} ‘enclosure’.

Is Dodsworth a good read?

Fascinating, occasionally facile and simplistic, but written with the urgency which drove Lewis’s best books, Dodsworth still deserves to be read, especially by Americans who may or may not understand their place in the world. Full review to follow. I’ve never read Lewis before but I have seen the movie based on this novel with Walter Huston.

What is the plot of Dodsworth?

First published in 1929, Dodsworth tells the story of a young American couple who moves to Europe. When the woman becomes involved with another man, her husband must choose between forgiving his wife or abandoning the relationship, & Europe, forever. More Details… To see what your friends thought of this book, please sign up.

Who is Fran Dodsworth and Sam Dodsworth?

Sam Dodsworth is a fifty-something millionaire manufacturer of automobiles who has recently retired. Fran is his forty-something wife, and together, they are doing the Grand Tour of E

Is “Dodsworth” a satire?

Dodsworth, which even right-wing journalist John Chamberlain praised as a rare sympathetic treatment of the businessman in American literature, does not make the titular protagonist the butt of the kind of satire we see in Babbitt, the more so as by the time we catch up to him he has retired.

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