Help me ID a book

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from my childhood. It was a young adult mystery and had something to do with two english bull terriers (aka the spuds mckensie/target dogs). I think it might have been english, or at the least set in the UK. No searches I run on google return anything familiar. This would have been in the early-mid 80's.

Also, help anyone else ID any books they can't remember the titles of!

anthony kyle monday (akmonday), Wednesday, 14 January 2004 16:40 (twenty-two years ago)

Only book I remember with two dogs was 'The Plague Dogs', and that depressed the shit out of me. Sorry, can't help you.

writingstatic (writingstatic), Wednesday, 14 January 2004 22:19 (twenty-two years ago)

It wasn't that, I've read that. This was something much less heady.

anthony kyle monday (akmonday), Wednesday, 14 January 2004 23:18 (twenty-two years ago)

Any of these books ring a bell? (under Fiction)
http://www.alohabullies.com/bull_terrier_book_list.htm

Chris Hill (Chris Hill), Thursday, 15 January 2004 20:07 (twenty-two years ago)

Can you help me ID a book? It's something I read in junior high, and my best friend and I have been trying to remember the title for ages. I've searched and searched, but I can't remember enough of the details. I know it's a well-known book, and I feel like a bit of a fool not knowing it.

It's about a boy who somehow ends up left in the desert with no supplies, and he is being hunted by a man in a Jeep, I think. I remember that he finds a pool of water in a cave and drinks from it. That's all I can remember. I thought the title was Hunted, or something similar, but I seem to have a mental block.

Aimee, Tuesday, 20 January 2004 14:06 (twenty-two years ago)

i just recently picked up a vhs copy at the thrift store of a t.v. movie from the 70's that is exactly what you describe. Andy Griffith was the guy in the jeep. he was creepy.

scott seward (scott seward), Tuesday, 20 January 2004 14:19 (twenty-two years ago)

It was called The Savages. Andy accidently shoots an old miner and the kid wants to go for help. but Andy has other plans. Then it becomes a deadly cat and mouse game and there are slingshots involved.
Andy Griffith is just creepy in general. Ever see A Face In The Crowd? Even the Andy Griffith show reminds me of Jim Thompson's The Killer Inside Me, but with more pie-baking and less blood.

scott seward (scott seward), Tuesday, 20 January 2004 14:33 (twenty-two years ago)

I love you guys!!!! The Savages is based on the book "Deathwatch", which I found by searching the movie title. I'm excited. Thanks so much!

Aimee, Tuesday, 20 January 2004 17:20 (twenty-two years ago)

That's the one where he has sand in his pubes right?

Leee Majors (Leee), Tuesday, 20 January 2004 19:08 (twenty-two years ago)

Yes. It's also the book where a starving, dehydrated child runs fast enough, sideways no less, to use a carved-out downslope of rock as a "hippodrome" (inspired by his earlier trips to the circus) so as not to plunge to his death. Who knew it was comedy?

I should mention I loved that book when I was made to read it in 9th grade--in a course, incidentally, in which we seemed to read only about neo-gothic sex and death. The Most Dangerous Game, Lord of the Flies, The Lottery, Leiningen vs. the Ants, Alas Babylon, Hiroshima, The Rocking Horse Winner, Romeo and Juliet, A Distant Episode. What a strange diet for children, when imposed (and how obvious, when not.)

M.

Matthew K (mtk), Tuesday, 20 January 2004 21:12 (twenty-two years ago)

I had forgotten all about the hippodrome. I'm going to re-read the book as soon as I can get to the library.

Funny you should mention the strange themes fed to middle-schoolers... I also read The Most Dangerous Game, Lord of the Flies, The Lottery and Romeo and Juliet that year, yet was denied extra credit (we were given a percentage point for every 100 pages read, resulting in my grade for the year reaching the 200% mark) for reading anything by Stephen King, who was my favorite author at the time. Though certainly not equal in literary value, no Misery or Cujo could be more disturbing to a 13-year-old than Lord of the Flies.

Aimee, Friday, 23 January 2004 13:33 (twenty-two years ago)

nine months pass...
I was probably 11 or 12 when I read this book. It was about a boy in New York City whose father owned a deli or bodega or something, and they boy got put in charge for a while (father had a health problem?) and expanded it into a chain. It became huge and the family got rich and he threw a giant party in Central Park but he wasn't happy.

In one scene some kind of fatalistic older character tells the boy about a man who died and his epitaph read: "Life is a jest and everything shows it; I thought so once and now I know it." The high school stock boys all laugh at this. I remember this scene because I didn't get why that was funny.

W i l l (common_person), Thursday, 28 October 2004 19:16 (twenty-one years ago)

the book I was looking for up above might have been "sleeping dogs" by Dick Lochte or "laughing dog" by the same author.

kyle (akmonday), Monday, 1 November 2004 19:20 (twenty-one years ago)

whoops, no it wasn't , those were just written a few years ago

kyle (akmonday), Monday, 1 November 2004 19:21 (twenty-one years ago)

six years pass...

I read a story by a Japanese person written in the 80s or maybe the early 90s. The story is about a Japanese student living in Italy, I think with an older guy. The student spends a lot of his time playing a home console video game version of Dante's Inferno. A lot of the story is about how the game plays and the progress the guy makes in the game.

Only you can help. The library that had the anthology I read the story in has sold heaps of their stock because they are trying to focus on online texts and they don't have it anymore.

bamcquern, Saturday, 12 February 2011 05:50 (fifteen years ago)


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