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Walter Alden Dyer

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Walter Alden Dyer (October 10, 1878 – June 20, 1943) was an American author and journalist.

He joined the staff of the Springfield Union in Springfield, Massachusetts in 1901, edited many publications, and became managing editor of Country Life in America (1906–1914). He was one of the most famous writers of dog stories. He was a prolific writer who contributed many articles to magazines, and published various works, including:

Frontispiece Pierrot, Chien de Belgique (translation by Fanny Mathot - 1916
  • The Lure of the Antique (1910)
  • The Richer Life (1911)
  • Pierrot, Dog of Belgium (1915), French title: Pierro, chien de Belgique
  • Creators of Decorative Styles (1917)
  • Handbook of Furniture Styles (1918)
  • Sons of Liberty (1920)
  • Gulliver the Great(1916)
  • The River Life (1911)
  • Dogs of Boytown (1918)
  • Many Dogs There Be (1924)
  • All Around Robin Hood's Barn: a Canine Idyll (1926)
  • The Breakwater (1927)
  • Sprigs of Hemlock (1931)[1]

He was born in Roslindale, Boston, Massachusetts to Ebenezer Porter Dyer, Jr. and Martha Augusta Fearing.

He graduated from Amherst College Class of 1900. The Archives and Special Collections at Amherst College holds some of his papers.

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