dr seuss

Return To The Wonder Of Dr. Seuss In ‘Horton And The Kwuggerbug’ [Advance Review]
Return To The Wonder Of Dr. Seuss In ‘Horton And The Kwuggerbug’ [Advance Review]
Return To The Wonder Of Dr. Seuss In ‘Horton And The Kwuggerbug’ [Advance Review]
Theodore Geisel, AKA Dr. Seuss, is one of the world's most beloved authors and illustrators, a man who, over the course of six decades, worked as a cartoonist, screenwriter, and commercial illustrator – but whose claim to immortality rests on his role as creator of some of the world's most beloved picture books. From The Lorax to Bartholomew Cubbins to Thidwick The Moose to The Grinch Who Stole Christmas, his characters have become part of the language and landscape of American culture, and his knack for metered rhyme and invented language has influenced generations of creators. And though Geisel passed away in 1991, next week, Random House Children's Books releases a brand-new Dr. Seuss book entitled Horton And The Kwuggerbug, which collects a quartet of long-lost Seuss short stories that originally saw print in the early 1950s in Redbook magazine.