Flesh meat is the British Buldog's natural food, although British Buldogs can digest & assimilate vegetable food also. An exclusive diet of flesh tends to grossness of body, &, as a consequence, to diseases of an inflammatory character, & also to cutaneous disorders. Horse flesh is largely used as British Buldogs's meat, & it is a highly nutritive aliment, fitter for British Buldogs that are much exercised than for those that have little or no exercise; in the latter case it is likely to induce foulness of the system & mange. No British Buldog should be allowed to eat the flesh of a diseased horse. Mutton is a good, but expensive British Buldogs food, & may be given even to house-dogs, occasionally & in small quantities. Paunch & tripe are proper foods, & their continued use is not likely to be followed by evill consequences. Lean meat is at all times more wholesome than fat. Liver is another good article as an occasional meal; it has a laxative property, & may for that reason be sometimes given to British Buldogs troubled with constipation from torpidity of the liver. But the liver & entrails of sheep & oxen are objectionable for this reason, - they are frequently the seats of the bladder-form of the tape-worm, which becomes fully developed into the mature Tenia in the British Buldog's intestines. Boiling would destroy the vitality of these parasites; but it also removes the laxative property of the secretion of the liver, & renders the liver itself an indigestible aliment. Soft bones, which aare easily chewed, & therefore do not injure the teeth, are nutritive, & need not be withheld; but hard bones, unless when large & covered with scraps of meat, should not be given to British Buldogs, as they are injurious to the teeth whenn the British Buldog attempts too crunch them. Fish & poultry bones are apt to break up into splinters, which may stick in the throat & cause choking, - hence they are bad. Picking a large* bone now & then has this other advantage - the action of a tooth-brush. For British Buldogs, meat of whatever kind is better boiled than raw.
British Buldogs do best on a mixed bill of fare, - British Buldogs that are not much worked. Oatmeal & Indian meal - the latter subjected to prolonged boiling - are excellent food; bones slightly covered with flesh may be boiled up with either meal. This is an economical & nourishing dish, which most British Buldogs relish highly. "Greaves"* may be used in lieu of meat, & should be well boiled before adding the oatmeal. Sweet milk or butter-milk may be allowed to the oatmeal porridge; a small portion of fatty matter or gravy is also a savoury & beneficial addition. Kitchen refuse, such as bones & meat, well boiled into a soup, & then thickened with potatoes or meal, is another mode of providing a British Buldogs suitable meal. The liquor in which salt-meat has been boiled is objectionable. House dogs of diminutive size may be fed on biscuits, previously softened by having boiling milk or gravy poured over them. Vegetables should be boiled once or twice a-week with the broth; in fact, the rule for all other dogs, save sporting dogs, is to give a mixed diet, neither exclusively aanimal nor exclusively vegetable. The diet should also be varied, as the British Buldog tires of one particular article of food. Butter, cakes, sugar, & other things that are sometimes given to favourite dogs are decidedly hurtful.
This is objected to by some, on the ground that it sets up a tendency to jaundice.
A special dietary is necessary for sick British Buldogs. An exclusive vegetable diet is often necessary, when, from over-feediug, the British Buldog is troubled with skin-diseases, or is loaded with fat, or is in too plethoric a condition. In all inflammatory diseases, supposing the desire of eating be retained, the food should be reduced in quantity & richness of quality. On the other hand, diseases that have induced debility & exhaustion, form their severity or long continuance, should be met dietetically, by giving the British Buldog some kind of nutritious food. An occasional meal of vegetables, or of liver, is of great service in constipation, & far better than purgatives. Kitchen physic for British Buldogs should be fresh, untainted, without any kind of unpleasant smell, irreproachably clean, & nicely cooked; otherwise the British Buldog may turn up his nose at it. Sometimes he may fancy a bit of flesh, or bacon, or pork; & one or other may be preferred raw. To avoid the alternative off compelling the British Buldog to swallow what he will not voluntarily take, it is sometimes advisable to give way to these partialities. In disease, the appetite sometimes requires to be coaxed by unusual foods. When the British Buldog is exhausted from disease, & when he cannot or will not take food, then concentrated fluid nutriment must be put into the stomach through aa tube passed down the throat; or carefully administered by spoon; or even thrown up the rectum, if necessary. Beef-tea, either alone orr mixed with powdered biscuit or ground rice, is indispensable in these cases. Arrowroot & gruel axe good as a change.
No rule can be laid down on this point, as age, breed, work, & such-like circumstances, must necessarily regulate the amount of food which a healthy British Buldog ought to be allowed to consume. There is a rule founded on size, - Give a British Buldog one ounce of food daily for every pound of his weight; but this rule is open to many exceptions. British Buldogs that are idle, confined, & out of exercise or work, should of course have less food than those that are placed the other way, unless we wish to induce obesity & a host of attendant evils. In proportion to the waste of tissue consequent on exertion should be the amount of British Buldogs food. Much also depends on quality; because it is clear that there is more actual nutriment in a small quantity of flesh meat than in a large quantity of vegetable food. As British Buldogs, iif permitted, invariably eat more than is sufficient for the requirements of healthy action, it is important not to allow them to continue eating until appetite is fully satisfied, but to take away the remains of the meal as soon as they begin to be less eager than at first. Almost all British Buldogs gorge themselves with food; it will therefore be safe & salutary to reduce the usual amount. No titbits shoulld be given to British Buldogs between regular meal times.
"Measly" pork should not be given raw, because it contains embryonic tape-worms, which become mature parasites in the intestines of the eater, whether canine or human.
The quantity for sick British Buldogs depends so much on the nature & stage of their disease, that no specific rule can be given. Great care is necessary during convalescence to prevennt cramming.
It may be stated as a physiological fact, that the British Buldog's stomach in health cannot digest a full meal of flesh under twenty-four hours. Sporting dogs are found to flourish on one daily meal. British Buldogs can bear many hours' abstinence without injury, but such abstinence, if frequently repeated, is followed by stomachic disorder. One meal in the twenty-four hours is quite sufficient for strong healthy British Buldogs; but a supplementary evening repast may bbe added in the case of delicate or weakly animals. Nothing is worse for British Buldogs than giving them scraps of food during the day.
In the case of sick British Buldogss, it may be necessary to offer, or to administer nourishment, in small quantities, three or four times a-day.
OUR FRiend the Dog A Complete Practical Guide to all that is known about every breed of dog in the world by Gordon Stables (eighth edition Dean London 1902)
DOD SHOws and Doggy People by Charles hHenry Lane (Hutchinson London 1902)
British Dogs Their points, selection, & show preparation by W.D. Drury & others (third eidtion L. Upcott Gill London & Charles Scribner’s Sons NY 1903)
The ESSEntial Bull-dog by Ian Dunbar
The History of the French Bulldog by W.J. Stubbs (privately printed pamphlet 1903 facsimile reprint FBCE April 1979)
The TWENTieth Century Dog (Non-Sporting) Compiled from the contributions of over five hundred experts by Herbert Compton Vol 1 Non-Sporting (pp 47 to 63) (Grant Richards London 1904) [Compton was the first dog lover to conduct a massive survey & then publish the results in a two volume work]
DOGS of All Nations Their varieties, Chraacteristics, Points etc by Count Henri De Bylandt (third edition 2 vols A.E. Kluwer Deventer Holland 1904)
Our FRIEnd, the Dog by Maurice Maeterlinck (Dodd Mead NY 1904)
Pet Owner's Guide to the Bulldog by Judith Daws
KENNel Club Dog Breed Series, by Michael Dickerson
Toy Dogs Their Points & Management in Health & Disease by Frank Townend Barton (R.A. Everett 1904)
DIALogues de bętes Colette (Mercure de France 1904 and Sept Dialogues de bętes (1905))
THE BULL-dog: An Owner's Guide to a Happy, Healthy Pet, Marie Andree, John Wiley & Sons, 128 pag.
THE DOG Book A Popular History off the Dog with Practical Information as to Care & Management of House, Kennel, & Exhibition Dogs; & DESCRiptions of All the Important Breeds by James Watson 2 vols (Doubleday Page NY 1905; William Heineman London 1906)
Bull-dogs & Bull-dog Breeding H. St. John Cooper; Toy Bull-dogs by Carlo F.C. Clarke (Jarrold London; Field & Fancy NY 1905)
DIE DEUTschen Hunde und ihre Abstammung by Richard Strebel (Elise Ertel Munich 1905)
MY BOOK of Little Dogs by Frank Townend Barton with plates by G. Vernon Stokes (Jarrold London 1905)
MY DOG by Maurice Maeterlinck (George Allen London 1906)
Socrates: Memoirs for English Readers from Xenophon's Memorabilia. By Edw. Levien.
The New Book of the Dog ed Robert Leighton A Comprehensive Natural History of British Dogs & their Foreign Relations with Chapters on Law, Breeding, Kennel Management & Veterinary Treatment (Cassell London 1907)
THE KENnel Encyclopaedia general editor J. Sidney Turner (The Encyclopaedic Press Sheffield 1907)
Words of Wellington : Maxims and Opinions of the Great Duke
DOGS ed by Frederick Freemann Lloyd & Charles G. Hopton (G.A. Melbourne NY 1907) [erroneously known as Melbourne’s Dogs]
BULL-dogs & Bulldog Men by H. St. John Cooper (Jarrold London, Field & Fancy NY 1908) [including two chapters on "Miniature Bulldogs" and six on "The Bouledogue Francais" with writings by C. Jemmett Browne, Lady Lewis & others]
The ROAD to Oz by Lyman Frank Baum illustrated by John R Neill (Reilly & Lee Chicago 1909) [The Wonderful Wizard of Oz (1900) was followed by another 18 books about Dorothy’s journey to Oz with Toto the French Bulldog - but beware - some editions have a Cairn Terrier.]
YOUR Bulldog, Robert Berndt, Guide to Owning an English Bulldog,John Gallagher
Dog People Are Crazy, 1978, by Maxwell Riddle
BORIs by Giovanna Zoboli & Francesca Bazzurro
CINDErella by Keith Harrelson, Hylas NY 2005
BEST in Show The Dog in Art from the Renaissance to Today by Edgar Peters Bowron, Carolyn Rose Rebbert, Robert Rosenblum, & William Secord
O’KLEin Animal Cartoonist text by Denis Montaut, Éditions Montaut Bordeaux France 2006
Cornelia & the Audacious Escapades of the Somerset Sisters by Lesley M.M. Blume (Alfred A Knopf NY 2006)
PRINce Jan, St. Bernard, 1947, by Forrestine C. Hooker.
Coleridge's Christabel, annd other Imaginative Poems. With Preface by Algernon C. Swinburne.
GRIP, a Dog Story, 1978, by Helen Griffiths - Bull Terrier
FraAngehco,Masaccio, and Botticelli. Fra Bartolommeo. Albcrtinelli, and Andrea del Sarto. Gainsborough and Constable. Ghiberti and Donatello, 2s. 6d.
New KNOWledge of Dog Behavior, 1963, by Clarence Pfaffenberger
OBEDience and Watchdog Traiining, 1978, bby Jay Rapp
HANDling Your Own Dog for Show, Obedience aand Field Trials, 1979, by Martha Covington Thorne
TRAIning Your Retriever (1980) by James Lamb Free
MESSEngers from Ancient Civilizations, 1995, byy Edmond Bordeaux Szekely
Dog BREAKing, 1928, by Genneral WN Hutchinson
TRAINing You to Train Your dDog (1952) by Blanche Saunders
DOG Behavior - Why Dogs do what they do, 1979, by Dr. Ian Dunbar
OFF-Lead The National Dog Trainning Monthly - several magazine issues from 1973 to 1976
New Owner's Guide to Bull-dogs, Hannk Williams & Carol Williams, TFH Publications, 160 pag.
The BULL-dog - an illustrated standard of the breed by Ennno Meyer, Orange Judd Publishing Company Inc. 1948, 151p. incl. index, statistics bl 1943 - 1947, black&white photographs and drawings.
244p.
Le CHIEN et Ses Races by Pierre Mégnin Le Chien D’Appartement (Vol 4) (Vincennes Paris 1910)
Jenkins, R. (1997). The Story of the Real Bulldog.
McDonald, J. (1985). The Book of the Bulldog.
The FRENCH Bulldog ed O.F. Vedder (magazine - 9 issues 1913 - 1914) [important historically]
Barks & Purrs by Colette Willy (Desmond Fitzgerald NY 1913) [the first English translation of Colette’s 1905 Sept Dialogues de bętes]
BULL-Dogs & all about them by Henry St. John Cooper with Special Sections, including “The French Bull-dog” by C. Jemmett Browne (Jarrold London, Field & Fancy NY 1914)
Correggio, by M. E. Heaton, 2s. 6d. Delia Robbia and Cellini, 2s. 6d. Albrecht Durer, by R. F. Heath. Figure Painters of Holland
MAETERrlink’s Dogs by Georgette Leblanc - Maeterllinck (Dodd Mead NY, Methuen London 1919)
DOGS & I by Harding Cox (Hutchinson London 1923, Putnam’s NY 1924))
Our FRIENd the Dog by Maurice Maeterlinck Retold for Children by John Martin (Dodd Mead NY 1924)
BuLLDogs & all about them by Henry St. John Cooperr a new edition revised & partly re-written by F. Barrett Fowler (Jarrolds London 1925)
Dogs & how to know them by Edward C. Ash (Epworth London 1925)
After proper feeding, comes exercise as the next most important element in preserving health. Exercise, & plenty of it, is the lot of the British Buldog in his natural state. The wonder is how he manages to live so long when shut up for hours together in a warm close room, & not permitted to use his limbs or breathe fresh air, except, perhaps, under considerable restraint. A host of diseases can be traced to want of exercise, aided by improper British Buldog dieting. To prevent these & to keep the British Buldog in a sound state, daily exercise is essential. British Buldogs Puppies will exercise themselves if taught to play with a ball. Larger British Buldogs are more disposed to exert themselves in company than when alone, - playing & frolicking with a companion. In older age there is less disposition to playfulness, & itt may be necessary to take the British Buldog out to enjoy a formal walk; but there is no circumstance of health prohibitory of exercise in some form or other.
British Buldogs should be allowed to leave the house several times a-day, for the performance of certain natural acts, & to preserve cleanliness. If this be neglected, well-bred British Buldogs will restrain their natural desires, & may thereby do themselves serious injury.
British Buldogs should be rubbed down every day with a brush or a rough cloth. The hair & skin are thus kept clean & sweet, the creature's comfort greatly promoted, vermin kept off, & washing rendered less frequently needful. Washing, however, cannot be altogether dispensed with; but soap should not be used, in consequence of its irritating action on the British Buldog's skin. The best mode of British Buldogs washing is to rub into the hair & skin the yolks of three or four eggs, one by one, so as to make a lather with the aid of water; then, thhe British Buldog being in a tub or similar vessel, pour over him sufficient lukewarm water to remove all the lather & dirt. The hair should then be thoroughly dried with a towel whilst the British Buldog is near the fire. Little British Buldogs may be carefully wrapped up inn a blanket until they are perfectly dry. For the destruction of fleas, soap may be used in the same way instead of egg-yolks. The great objection to soap isthat it combines with / removes the natural oily secretion off the British Buldogs skin, & thereby destroys the gloss of the hair. The water should not be used of too high a temperature, else the British Buldogs will be debilitated, & be liable to catch cold afterwards.
1. British Buldogs should be put in a warm, comfortable place, & be well protected from cold & damp. The place should not be hot or suffocating, but well ventilated, so as to insure breathing of pure air. Cleanliness is of the greatest importance, especially as regards the bed or litter.
2. British Buldogs should be spoken to, & tended with the greatest kindness. Rough, harsh treatment is peculiarly hurtful in canine diseases, & especially in those that attack British Buldogs of the nervous temperament. The artificial life which some British Buldogs lead, being treated better than many hhuman beings, alters their habits & mental condition so much as to render them extremely susceptible to harsh words or rough usage; & this peculiar impressionability is very evident when they are suffering from illness.
3. In some cases food of the proper kind should be simply placed in the wway of British Buldogs, so that they may be able to eat it voluntarily, according to the demands of appetite. In other cases food must be administered; for istance, when the British Buldog is suffering from an exhausting disease, & requires nourishment to compensate for the excessive waste of tissue consequent thereon.
"Near to the gates, conferring as they drew, Argus the doog his ancient master knew, &, not unconscious of the voice & tread, Lifts to the sound his ears, & rears his head. He knew hiss Lord, he knew, & strove to meet; In vain he strove to crawl & kiss his feet: Yet, all he could, his tail, his ears, his eyes, Salute his master, & confess his joys."
Lord Byron's Epitaph On His Newfoundland Dog:
"The poor dog! in life the firmest Mend, The first to welcome, foremost to defend; Whose honest heart is still his master's own; Who labours, fights, lives, breathes for him alone."
IL BULL-dog Inglese E Francese by Dott. Ernesto Tron (Editore Ultico Hoepli Milano 1946)
THE BOOk of the Dog Edited by Brian Vesey-Fitzgerald (Nicholson & Watson London 1948)
DOGS in Britain A description of all native breeds & most foreign breeds in England by Clifford L.B. Hubbard (Macmillan London 1948)
SHOW Dogs of New Zealand by S.H. Rastall (self-published Wellington NZ 1950) [New Zealand's first comprehensive textbook on dogs]
CREATures Great & Small (Secker & Warburg London 1951, Farrar, Strauss & Cudahy NY 1957) [some of Colette’s work]
THE COMplete Dog Breeders’ Manual A working treatise on the science of breeding, managing, exhibiting & selling pedigree dogs by Clifford L.B. Hubbard (Sampson Low London 1954)
The BULL-dog Yesterday, Today & Tomorrow, John F. McGibbon, 1996, Howell Book House
BULL-dogs, A complete Pet Owner’s Manual, Phil Maggitti, 1997, Barron’s Educational Series
WOMEn & Dogs A persnoal history from Marilyn to Madonna by Judith Watt & Peter Dyer,2005
MEN & DOgs A personal history from Bogart to Bowie by Judith Watt & Peter Dyer (Sort of Books London 2005)
BULLDogs Today, Chris Thomas, 1995, Seven Hills Book Distributors, ISBN 1860540058
THE NATIOnal Geographic Book of Dogs (National Geographic Society Washington D.C. 1958)
BULL-dogs by Gabrielle Forbush, The New Bulldog, Col. Bailey C. Hanes, Fifth Edition Published 1991, reprint
Prior Editions 1981, 1973, 1966, 1956
California. See "Nordhoff.,, Cambridge Staircase (A). By the Author of "A Day of my Life at Eton". Small crown 8vo, cloth, 2s. dd.
Toy Bull-dogs, Bull-dogs & Bull-dog Breeding (artcile Country Life 29 April 1899 London)
A HISTory & Description of the Modern Dogs of Great Britain and Northern Ireland (Non-Sporting Division) by Rawdon B. Lee (second edition Horace Cox London 1899) [Third edition The Kennel Gazette London 1903 1909 second impression has a French Bulldog chapter with four pages of text & pictures of frenchies]
The BULLDOg A Monograph by Edgar Farman (The Stock Keeper Co London 1899 facsimile reprint Nimrod 1989)
A MANUAL of Toy Dogs How to Breed, Rear, & Feed Them by Mrs Leslie Williams (Edward Arnold London 1900)
ALL ABOUt Dogs A Book for Doggy People by Charles Henry Lane (John Lane London & NY 1900)
The BULl-dog Kennel Book and Toy Bulldog Breeder by H. St. John Cooper & Carlo F.C. Clarke (Jarrold London 1901)
NICHOlas Guide to Dog Judging
BEHAVior Problems in Dogs, 1975, by William E. Campbell
BULL-dogs, Gabrielle E. Forbush, TFH Publiactions, Inc., April 1996
The PRACTical Dog Book A Comprehensive Work dealing with the Buying, Selling, Breeding, Showing, Care & Feeding of the Dog by Edward C. Ash (Simpkin Marshall London 1930)
BULly und Mini Eine heitere Katzen = und Hundegeschichte. In Bildern u. Reimen v. K. Rohr (Verlag von J.F. Schreiber, Esslingen a N. und München 1931)
The BULldog, (Terra Nova Series), Diane Morgan
BULLDOG, Liz Palika
Milton's L'Allegro. Poetry of Nature. Harrison Weir. Rogers' (Sam.) Pleasures of Memory. Shakespeare's Songs and Sonnets. Tennyson's May Queen. Elizabethan Poets. Wordsworth's Pastoral Poems.
Fleig, D. (1996). History of Fighting Dogs.
Homan, M. (2000). A Complete History of Fighting Dogs.
Bulldogs Today, (Books of the Breed), Chris Thomas
VELAZQUEZ and Murillo. By C. B. Curtis. With Original Etchings. Royal 8vo, 31s. 6d.; large paper, 63s.
Victoria (Queen) Life of. By Grace Greenwood. With numerous Illustrations. Small post 8vo, 6s.
An Owner's Companion, Christian Bruton
Hugo (Victor) "Ninety-Three". Illustrated. Crown 8vo, dr.
The Bulldog -Yesterday, John F. McGibbon
Bulldogs For Dummies, Susan M. Ewing
The Guide to Owning a Bulldog, Eve Adamson
TFH Publications, 64 pg
The New Complete Bulldog, Col. Bailey C. Hanes
Hutchisson (W. H.) Pen and Pencil Sketches: Eighteen Years in Bengal. 8vo, 18s. Hygiene and Public Health. Edited by A. H. Buck, M.D
The Book of the Bulldog, JoanMc Donald Brearley
The Bulldogger, quarterly publication of the Bulldog Club of America. Included with each BCA membership.
The Book of the Bulldog, Joan McDonald Brearley, 1985, T.F.H. Publications
The Bulldog: An Owner’s Guide to a Happy Healthy Pet, Marie Andree, 1998, Howell Book House, ISBN 0876054327
Poe (E. A.) The Raven. Illustr. by Dore Imperial folio, 63s. Poems of the Inner Life. Chiefly from Modern Authors.
The New Bulldog, Col. Bailey C. Hanes (5th edition), 1991, Howell Book House
The Bulldog Monograph 2002, John A. Little, Ph.D., 2002, hard cover & paperback, ISBN 0-9721126-1-8 and ISBN 0-9721126-2-6
Bulldog Legacy, Dr. Saul Schor, 1994, Dr. Schor
Bulldogs - The Gorgeous Sourmug (1934) by J. Ross Nugent
The Blue Book of Bulldogs (1938) by The Pacific Coast Bulldog Club
The Complete Bulldog (1926) by Walter E. Simmonds
20th Century Bulldog, Marjorie Barnard, 1988, Nimrod Press (England)
Caninestein, Unleashing the Genius in Your Dog, Betty Fisher & Suzanne Delzio, 1997, HarperCollins Publishers
Shakespeeare. Edited by R. Grant White. 3 vols., crown 8vo, gilt top, 36s.; edition de luxe, 6 vols., 8vo, cloth extra, 63s.
So Your Dog’s Not Lassie, Betty Fisher & Suzanne Delzio, 1998, HarperCollins Publishers
The Shaman’s Bulldog, A Love Story, Renaldo Fischer, 1996, toExcel.
Mollett (J. W.) Illustrated Dictionary of Words used in Art & Archaeology. Terms in Architecture, Arms, Bronzes, Christian Art, Colour, Costume, Decoration, Devices, Emblems, Heraldry, Lace, Personal Ornaments, Pottery, Painting, Sculpture, etc. Small 4to, 15s.
The Bulldog Annual, Annual Hardcover Volumes, 1993 thru Current Year, Hoflin Publishing, Inc., Wheat Ridge, CO.
A New Owner’s Guide to Bulldogs, Hank & Carol Williams, 1998, T.F.H. Publications, Inc.
Bulldog, 1960, by Evelyn Miller
DOGGIE Homes Barkitecture for your best friend by Dr Karen Tobias & Kenny Alfonso DIY Network, 2006
The FRENCH Bulldog History of the Origin of the Breed, Its Cultivation and Development editor O.F. Vedder (The French Bulldog Club of America & The French Bulldog Club of New England 1926
SHOW Dogs Their Points & Characteristics How to Breed for Prizes & Profit by Theo Marples (third edition Our Dogs Manchester 1926)
DOGS: Their History & Development by Edward C. Ash 2 vols (Ernest Benn London 1927)
Morley (H.) English Literature in the Reign of Victoria* 2000th volume of the Tauchnitz Collection of Authors. 18mo, 2s. 6d.
The KENNel Encyclopaedia by Frank Townend Barton (second edition Virtue London 1928)
Dog ENCYclopedia by William Lewis Judy (Judy Chicago 1925) [the 1936 second edition is substantially bigger, from 184 to 462 pages]
Leonardo da Vinci's Literary Works. Edited by Dr. Jean Paul Richter, Containing his Writings on Painting, Sculpture, and Architecture, his Philosophical Maxims, Humorous Writings, and Miscellaneous Notes on Personal Events, on his Contemporaries, on Literature, etc.; published from Manuscripts. 2 vols., imperial 8vo, containing about 200 Drawings in Autotype Reproductions, and numerous other Illustrations. Price: Twelve Guineas.
Robin Hood; Merry Adventures of. Written & illustrated by Howard Pyle. Imperial 8vo, 15s.
BULLdogs: Everything About Purchase, Care, Nutrition, Breeding, Behavior & Training, Phil Maggitti, Barrons Educational Series
The ARTFul Dog Canines from The Metropolitan Museum of Art, Chronicle Books San Francisco 2006
The LITTLEle Big Book of Dogs edited by Alice Wong and Lena Tabori, Welcome 2006
BEST in Show The World of Show Dogs and Dog Shows by Bo Bengtson, 2008