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People Have More Fun Than Anybody A Centennial Celebration of Drawings and Writings by James Thurber

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ISBN-10: 0156002353

ISBN-13: 9780156002356

Edition: 1995

Authors: James Thurber, Michael J. Rosen

List price: $15.95
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Description:

This volume of previously uncollected work comprises prose pieces and drawings by the only cartoonist who could claim to draw "abstract things like despair, disillusion, despondency, sorrow, lapse of memory, exile...." Seventy-five black-and-white line drawings throughout. Edited and with an Introduction by Michael J. Rosen.
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Book details

List price: $15.95
Copyright year: 1995
Publisher: HarperCollins Publishers
Publication date: 10/13/1995
Binding: Paperback
Pages: 192
Size: 7.00" wide x 9.00" long x 0.50" tall
Weight: 0.704
Language: English

Born in Columbus, Ohio, Thurber was blinded in one eye in a childhood accident. He attended Ohio State University but left without earning a degree. In 1925 he moved to New York City, where he joined the staff of the New Yorker in 1927 at the urging of his friend E. B. White. For the rest of his lifetime, Thurber contributed to the magazine his highly individual pieces and those strange, wry, and disturbing pen-and-ink drawings of "huge, resigned dogs, the determined and sometimes frightening women, the globular men who try so hard to think so unsuccessfully." The period from 1925, when the New Yorker was founded, until the death of its creator-editor, Harold Ross, in 1951, was described by…