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Other books for young readers have had titles blaming aliens [26] and the protagonist's teacher [27] for the missing homework. A two-act children's musical called A Monster Ate My Homework has also been written. [28] The Dog Ate My Homework is the title of a British comedy/competition show first broadcast in 2014 on CBBC. [29]
The Croc Ate My Homework: June 1, 2014 ISBN 9781449436360: Strips selected to be appropriate for younger readers as part of Andrews McMeel Publishing's AMP! Comics for Kids series Title parodies "dog ate my homework" excuse for un-returned assignments; Cover features a crocodile with a piece of written paper sticking out of his mouth
Marley & Me: Life and Love with the World's Worst Dog is an autobiographical book by journalist John Grogan, published in 2005, about the 13 years he and his family spent with their yellow Labrador Retriever, Marley. The dog is poorly behaved and destructive, and the book covers the issues this causes in the family as they learn to accept him ...
A fact from The dog ate my homework appeared on Wikipedia's Main Page in the Did you know column on 1 November 2012 (check views). The text of the entry was as follows: Did you know... that the earliest known variant of "The dog ate my homework" as an excuse dates to 1905? A record of the entry may be seen at Wikipedia:Recent additions/2012 ...
Burns has stayed really busy since her "Baywatch" and "Dog Eat Dog" days, having starred in a variety of TV series and movies like the "Melrose Place" reboot, and "The Gourmet Detective." 2016 ...
Picasso & Lump: A Dachshund's Odyssey (ISBN 0821258109) is a 2006 book by David Douglas Duncan that features professional photographs of Pablo Picasso and his dachshund, Lump. The book, published by Thames & Hudson , gives an insight into Picasso's later life, and Picasso the man, not the image.
The 65th book by Naylor, it is the first in a quartet about a young boy and the title character, an abused dog. Naylor decided to write Shiloh after an emotionally taxing experience in West Virginia where she encountered an abused dog. Narrator and protagonist Marty Preston lives in the hills of Friendly, West Virginia.
In the novels, he is in elementary school. The novels take place in the 1950s, which is when Cleary wrote most of the books. The books describe adventures that he experiences in his neighborhood and his interactions with other neighborhood children. He has a dog named Ribsy and a part-time job doing a paper route in North Portland. [2]