Henry Huggins

library binding, 155 pages

English language

Published 1950 by William Morrow and Company.

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4 stars (11 reviews)

Henry felt that nothing very inte esting ever happened to him. But from the moment the stray dog in the drugstore begged for his ice cream cone and downed it in one gulp, everything was different. Henry decided that any dog as thin and hun- gry as this one needed a home. He named him Ribsy, telephoned his mother for permission to keep him, and embarked upon the most exciting year of his life.

The first adventure was taking his new dog home. Henry succeeded in getting him on the bus after a few bad starts, but by that time Ribsy was tired of being tied up in a paper shopping bag. He scratched his way out and turned the bus into a bed- lam. It was at the pet store where Henry bought horse meat for Ribsy that he acquired a pair of guppies at a bargain price. He …

40 editions

Review of 'Hengli jia de xiao dao dan' on 'Goodreads'

5 stars

A grown ass woman can read Beverly Cleary any time she wants for a bit of nostalgia and escapism, and there's no better time to do it than the week Ms. Cleary turns 100 years old. Sometimes you can go home again and it doesn't suck. It's just as you remembered and it makes you happy on a cold rainy Monday. Now on to Henry and Beezus!

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