Doctor Dolittle's Garden

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Hugh Lofting: Doctor Dolittle's Garden (1966, Random House Children's Books (A Division of Random House Group))

320 pages

Published Oct. 20, 1966 by Random House Children's Books (A Division of Random House Group).

ISBN:
978-0-224-60443-7
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4 stars (2 reviews)

Doctor Dolittle's garden is teeming with insects, including a giant moth from a world beyond earth.

43 editions

Review of "Doctor Dolittle's Garden" on 'Goodreads'

4 stars

Doctor Dolittle's Garden occupies an odd spot in the Dolittle series; it's a transitional book, covering the end of the multi-book "entertainment" plot (as I call it) and the Moon plot that followed.

The entertainment plot begins all the way back in the first book of the series, when the Pushmi-Pullyu goes home with the Doctor to help him make money to pay off his debts. It continues with the Dolittle Zoo and Caravan, the Puddleby Pantomime, and the Canary Opera. While the Doctor is, of course, himself always quite uninterested in money and even actively hostile to the concept ("Money! It's a curse."), the essential thrust of the entertainment plot is always how to make more of it.

The Moon plot, on the other hand, couldn't be more different: not only is money not a factor, but the Doctor literally leaves the whole world in which money matters behind. …

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4 stars