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Sabtu, 22 Juli 2017

Dewey Readmore Books (November 18, 1987 â€" November 29, 2006) was the library cat of the Spencer, Iowa Public Library. Having been abandoned in the library's drop box in January 1988, he was adopted by the library and gained local attention for his story shortly thereafter. His fame soon grew national, then international, and he was featured, among other mediums, on Paul Harvey's radio program The Rest of the Story and a Japanese documentary about cats. His story became so well known that, after his death in December 2006, his obituary was featured in over 270 newspapers around the world. Dewey's caretaker, librarian Vicki Myron, published a book on Dewey's life in 2008, entitled Dewey: The Small-Town Library Cat Who Touched the World, which became a New York Times number one nonfiction bestseller.

Early life



source : onedayinamerica.blogspot.com

On January 18, 1988, Vicki Myron, a librarian at the Spencer Public Library, discovered an eight week-old male kitten that had been left in the library's drop box the previous night. Myron nursed the cat, who was suffering from frostbite, back to health and named him Dewey, after Melvil Dewey, inventor of the Dewey Decimal library classification system. The library decided to keep him as a library cat and his story first received publicity in the Spencer Daily Reporter a week after his discovery. A contest to name the cat received nearly 400 entries, the largest number of which supported retaining the name "Dewey". The librarians added "Readmore Books" to his full name, inspired partially by the cartoon library cat Cap'n O. G. Readmore, although he was usually referred to as just "Dewey". Aside from a brief episode in August 1989, when he escaped and went missing for almost a week after a janitor left a side door open at night, Dewey spent the remainder of his life in the library. He was given the title of staff supervisor and his birthday was celebrated on November 18.

Worldwide fame



source : onedayinamerica.blogspot.com

In 1990 Myron entered Dewey into a charity pet photograph contest, as a way to promote the library, which Dewey won after receiving over 80% of the votes. Dewey's win was covered in The Des Moines Register, which led to increased local and state publicity in print and on television, and the library never again made an effort to increase Dewey's publicity outside of the local area. An appearance in the June/July 1990 issue of Country magazine took Dewey's story national, after which eleven people claimed to have been the person who left Dewey in the book drop as a way to protect him from the cold. He gained further recognition when he was featured in Gary Roma's late 1990s documentary Puss in Books, and his fame spread internationally. He appeared in calendars, and was discussed on an episode of Paul Harvey's The Rest of the Story in June 1999. In 2004 he made an appearance in a Japanese documentary and gained a cult following in that country.

Later years and legacy



source : priceonomics.com

Early in life, Dewey was diagnosed with megacolon, which was expected to shorten his lifespan. The condition was aggravated by his refusal to eat foods that would ease his condition, as he was a notoriously finicky eater. In later years he was also afflicted with arthritis. In October 2006 he was discovered to be suffering from hyperthyroidism and in November of the year he was diagnosed with a painful stomach tumor. Myron had Dewey euthanized on November 29. He had achieved an age equivalent to a human in his 90s.

Dewey's obituary ran in over 270 national and international newspapers and his death was announced on Japanese television. A public memorial service was held in December 2006 and his cremated remains were buried outside of the library. Despite numerous offers, the library placed a two-year moratorium on getting a new cat. In 2008 Myron published Dewey: The Small-Town Library Cat Who Touched the World, written with the help of Bret Witter, which reached number one on the The New York Times Best Seller list of nonfiction books. The book told the story of Dewey's life at the library, interspersed with the difficulties faced by the town and Myron in her personal life, and how Dewey helped ease those burdens. Later that year, Meryl Streep was cast to star in a film based on the book. A sequel to the book, Dewey's Nine Lives, was published in 2010 and detailed previously unreleased stories about Dewey, as well as tales Myron heard about other cats after Dewey's death. That same year a children's book, Dewey's Christmas at the Library, intended for 3-6 year-olds, was also published.

Notes



source : www.amazon.com

References



source : www.bretwitter.com



source : www.amazon.com

 
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