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EDITOR’S NOTE: Fred Bassett provides an introduction to a year-long project collaboration with the Tillamook County Pioneer and Tillamook County Democrats. Launching the weekend of Oregon’s birthday – February 14th – the Celebrate Oregon project will be a regular feature here on the Pioneer.
Celebrating Oregon’s Statehood – through Stories & Images – As we celebrate Oregon’s Birthday on February 14th, let’s celebrate the things that make Oregon special (and especially this area on the upper left edge, called Tillamook County.)
Just like the early settlers on the Oregon Trail, tell us about your path to Oregon, or share with us your “favorite place” in Oregon (and in Tillamook County.) What brought you here, and why do you think this place (or other places) in Oregon are so special?
Last modified on Thu 28 Jan 2021 04.48 EST
Simon Garfield is a popularising writer with a light touch and a wide range of interests. His big hit was a charming and erudite book about fonts called
Just My Type, but he has also written book-length studies of, among many other things, the Mini, stamp-collecting, wartime diaries, competitive wrestling, tiny things and the colour mauve.
Now it is the turn of dogs. This book is just as amiable as youâd expect from Garfield, but itâs also a bit too whimsical and wearyingly disorganised. You could write it off as a rush job done as a publishing proposition â dogs sell â except itâs odder and less cynical than that. Garfield clearly really does love dogs. Here, he writes like one. He woofs and bounds around the subject and frequently vanishes into the undergrowth in pursuit of phantom rabbits. You find yourself wishing he wore one of those collars, probably illegal, designed to concentrate the attention by deliver