Cover of There's a Hair in My Dirt! A Worm's Story

There's a Hair in My Dirt! A Worm's Story

by Unknown Author

5.0
(1 ratings)
64 pages1999Harper PaperbacksISBN 9780060932749

About this book

<p>Once upon a time in a place far away, lived a man named Gary Larson who used to draw cartoons. It was a cartoon that appeared for many years in daily newspapers and was loved by millions. (And was confusing to millions more.) But one day he stopped.</p><p>Gary went into hiding. He made a couple short films. He played his guitar. He threw sticks for his dogs. They threw some back.</p><p>Yet Gary was restless. He couldn't sleep nights. Something haunted him. (Besides Gramps.) Something that would return him to his roots in biology, drawing and dementia--a tale called <i>There's a Hair in My Dirt! A Worm's Story</i>.</p><p>It begins a few inches underground, when a young worm, during a typical family dinner, discovers there's a hair in his plate of dirt. He becomes rather upset, not just about his tainted meal but about his entire miserable, wormy life. This, in turn, spurs his father to tell him a story--a story to inspire the children of invertebrates everywhere.</p><p>And so Father Worm describes the saga of a fair young maiden and her adventuresome stroll through her favorite forest, a perambulator's paradise. It is a journey filled with mystery and magic. Or so she thinks.</p><p>Which is all we'll say for now.<br>What exactly does the maiden encounter?<br>Does Son Worm learn a lesson?<br>More important, does he eat his plate of fresh dirt?<br></p><p>Well, you'll have to read to find out, but let's just say the answers are right under your feet.</p><p>Written and illustrated in a children's storybook style, <i>There's a Hair in My Dirt! A Worm's Story</i> is a twisted take on the difference between our idealized view of Nature and the sometimes cold, hard reality of life for the birds and the bees and the worms (not to mention our own species).</p><p>Told with his trademark off-kilter humor, this first original non--<i>Far Side</i> book is the unique work of a comic master.</p><p>Now Larson can finally sleep at night. Question is, will you?</p>

Publication Details

Publisher
Harper Paperbacks
Published
1999
Pages
64
ISBN
9780060932749
Language
en

About Unknown Author

Gary Larson grew up in a blue collar household in a blue-collar city, Tacoma, Washington. He played jazz guitar and worked in a music store, and in 1976 he sent six cartoons to Pacific Search, a regional science and nature magazine. They sent him $90, and that struck Larson as a lot more enjoyable work than the music store. His first steady work as a cartoonist was for The Sumner News-Review, a weekly paper in a Tacoma suburb. The job paid $3 a week. In 1979, The Seattle Times started carrying Larson's once-a-week work, titled Nature's Way, for $15 a strip. The panel drew some complaints of being sick and offensive, and a few complains were enough to get it canceled. Just as The Times pulled the plug, though, Larson took a trip to California to interest The San Francisco Chronicle in his work. The Chronicle offered Larson a daily panel, re-named it The Far Side, and began syndicating it to other newspapers. The Far Side eventually appeared in almost 2,000 newspapers, and every "best of" collection has been a best-seller. Distasteful, disgusting, and delightful, The Far Side often offended those with delicate minds. Nature's bloody nature was a recurring theme, and Larson gained an enthusiastic following among scientists. A species of chewing lice that infests owls was named in Larson's honor, Strigiphilus garylarsoni. Larson took a sabbatical from The Far Side in 1988, traveling to Africa and playing jazz. The panel resumed in 1990, but by late 1994 Larson was weary of deadlines and had enough money to quit The Far Side for good. He still draws cartoons, but on his own schedule, not a syndicate's. In 1998, he wrote There's a Hair in My Dirt: A Worm's Story, a book teaching science through macabre stories and illustrations. ([Source][1]) [1]: http://www.nndb.com/people/281/000022215/

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