
Daniel Tatarsky
Author of Eagle Annual: The Best of the 1950s Comic, Features Dan Dare the Greatest Comic Strip of All Time
About the Author
Works by Daniel Tatarsky
Eagle Annual: The Best of the 1950s Comic, Features Dan Dare the Greatest Comic Strip of All Time (2007) 62 copies
Eagle Annual: The Best of the 1960s Comic, Features Dan Dare, the Rolling Stones, the Space Race and England's World Cup 66 Previewed (2009) 39 copies
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Gender
- male
Members
Reviews
How Dogs Work by Daniel Tatarsky and David Humphries is a delightful book that, for the most part, delivers useful information in a humorous and lighthearted manner. My biggest issue is more about my preferences than something done poorly in the book.
I found the parts that had to do with understanding and interacting with your dog the most interesting. They offered simple rules and guidelines with adorable drawings. I could have done with less about the breeds, or at least the breed show more groupings. Which brings me to what just did not appeal to me, the overemphasis on purebred dogs. Yes, choosing the breed(s) of your dog is important based on your lifestyle and other factors. But how many winners of various dog shows were of what breed do not matter to me at all, in either my choice of a dog or in my interactions with my dogs. The groupings and their general characteristics could have taken considerably less room and been replaced with more information actually useful for dog owners. Yes, I am one of those who get my dogs from shelters or friends who have an unexpected litter, so the emphasis on purebred dogs rubbed me the wrong way. Like I said at the start, this is my personal preference. The parts I could have done without were done every bit as well as the rest of the book, so those into inbreeding can rest assured that it is all done well.
While I would recommend this to many people this is also one I would not give as a gift. It is a fun book and does offer helpful hints, but if I am giving to a new owner I would find one that is more geared toward that end and if I am giving to someone who just wants to better understand their dogs, I would find one geared more toward that.
Reviewed from a copy made available by the publisher via NetGalley. show less
I found the parts that had to do with understanding and interacting with your dog the most interesting. They offered simple rules and guidelines with adorable drawings. I could have done with less about the breeds, or at least the breed show more groupings. Which brings me to what just did not appeal to me, the overemphasis on purebred dogs. Yes, choosing the breed(s) of your dog is important based on your lifestyle and other factors. But how many winners of various dog shows were of what breed do not matter to me at all, in either my choice of a dog or in my interactions with my dogs. The groupings and their general characteristics could have taken considerably less room and been replaced with more information actually useful for dog owners. Yes, I am one of those who get my dogs from shelters or friends who have an unexpected litter, so the emphasis on purebred dogs rubbed me the wrong way. Like I said at the start, this is my personal preference. The parts I could have done without were done every bit as well as the rest of the book, so those into inbreeding can rest assured that it is all done well.
While I would recommend this to many people this is also one I would not give as a gift. It is a fun book and does offer helpful hints, but if I am giving to a new owner I would find one that is more geared toward that end and if I am giving to someone who just wants to better understand their dogs, I would find one geared more toward that.
Reviewed from a copy made available by the publisher via NetGalley. show less
I absolutely loved these as a kid. L. Ashwell Wood whether in the Eagle or elsewhere.
Sadly the production qualities could be better. They're not reproduced from originals, but from the Eagle comic printings. So many are dark, muddy colours and they're split across two pages, with the centrefold detail lost. But still a good reminiscence.
Sadly the production qualities could be better. They're not reproduced from originals, but from the Eagle comic printings. So many are dark, muddy colours and they're split across two pages, with the centrefold detail lost. But still a good reminiscence.
Back in the late 1970s, my parents bought me a Hamlyn anthology of Dan Dare stories one Christmas, containing ‘The Red Moon Mystery’ and ‘Safari in Space’, both of which remain my favourite Dare stories. Several years ago, I collected the full set of Hawk Publishing Dan Dare reprints. So when a “biography” of Dare was published a couple of years ago, I picked up a copy. And… it’s not very good. The book tells the story of Marcus Morris and Frank Hampson, and how Eagle was show more begun. But the writing throughout is terrible, and I spotted several inaccuracies (on things not related to Eagle, to be fair). There are some nice colour plates, particularly of the mock-ups of the first issue, and a useful appendix giving plot summaries of all the Dan Dare stories published in Eagle. But there are better books about Hampson, and reading about Dan Dare is no substitute for reading the actual Dan Dare comic strips. show less
Thank you NetGalley!
This was an interesting overview of dogs and a dog's life with comical notes throughout. There was more information on dog shows than I was expecting but I like to watch dog shows from time to time so I found it interesting.
This is not the book for you if you're looking for in depth information about training, specific breeds, etc.
The images were fun and cute.
This was an interesting overview of dogs and a dog's life with comical notes throughout. There was more information on dog shows than I was expecting but I like to watch dog shows from time to time so I found it interesting.
This is not the book for you if you're looking for in depth information about training, specific breeds, etc.
The images were fun and cute.
Awards
You May Also Like
Associated Authors
Statistics
- Works
- 12
- Members
- 281
- Popularity
- #82,781
- Rating
- 3.7
- Reviews
- 5
- ISBNs
- 32
- Languages
- 5













