About the Author:
Susan Meddaugh was born and raised in Montclair, New Jersey. She graduated from Wheaton College, where she studied French literature and fine arts. After working briefly with an advertising agency in New York, she moved to Boston and worked at a publishing company for ten years, first as a designer, then art editor, and finally as art director. While there, she did the illustrations for GOOD STONES (Houghton Mifflin) by Anne Epstein, and then decided to strike out on her own as a freelance illustrator and creator of children's books. Since that time, Susan has written and illustrated many popular books for children, including MARTHA SPEAKS, which was chosen as a NEW YORK TIMES Best Illustrated Book for 1992. In 1998 she was awarded the New England Book Award, given by the New England Booksellers Association to recognize a body of work. Her work also was acknowledged with a New York Times Best Illustrated Award. She lives in Sherborn, Massachusetts.
From Booklist:
PreS-Gr. 2. Harry, out at sea when a storm blows up, is stranded on a small, rocky island with nothing but one scraggly tree--and a rather large egg. Harry hopes that the egg will become hardboiled in the sun, but instead it hatches into a lizard. The lizard grows wings, and then it begins breathing fire. Harry has grown fond of his friend, but when he realizes the creature he's named Bizzard (a combination of buzzard and lizard) is a dragon, he hides until Bizzard leaves. Eventually Harry realizes how much he misses his friend: "Except for the fact that he was probably going to eat me, that dragon was good company." Another storm blows up, and Harry is sure he's a goner--until Bizzard returns to fly him home. After all, he thinks Harry's his mom. The ending is somewhat abrupt, but Meddaugh's sterling sense of humor, which shone in such books as Martha Speaks (1992), is certainly evident in both the amusing text and the art. Hapless Harry (a dog in man's clothing) is a fully developed character, and the Bizzard, silent except for the word "Mom" and as much puppy as dragon, shows actions can be funnier than words. Ilene Cooper
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved
"About this title" may belong to another edition of this title.