Little Girl Lost, Little Girl Found Year Three: Coming Home
From the byline, I’ll assume that “Godzilla the Bear” does NOT have an advanced degree.
Little Girl Lost, Little Girl Found Year Three: Coming Home
From the byline, I’ll assume that “Godzilla the Bear” does NOT have an advanced degree.
Since I think the 1970s, it’s been a sort of tradition in scientific and academic circles to list pets and named lab animals as contributors on otherwise serious papers. A little like the “Wilhelm Scream” of the science world – an inside joke only likely to be noticed by a few friends who think to look/listen for it.
Of course, after too many people do it and the word gets around, then suddenly folks start complaining.
Maybe, since Dr. Scieszka couldn’t list Godzilla the Bear on her thesis statement, she at least decided to credit the beast as co-author on a work of fiction.
The limbs seem to be drawn using the same technique I used for drawing cats back when I used crayons.
Is this like a “Where’s Waldo” graphic?
Let’s play “Where’s the title?”