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"I don't really understand it," he said of Clifford's enduring nature. "Whether it's his color, or if it's the fact that he's clumsy, like a lot of kids are clumsy. And a lot of kids would like to be forgiven for their mistakes, and Emily always forgives him when he makes a mistake." Bridwell had no particular teachable moment in mind. He just wanted to entertain kids. Later, Scholastic gave Clifford "10 Big Ideas" that include matters of human and dog decency: sharing, respect, believing in oneself and helping others among them. "I said to my editor, I think after about the second or third book, `Maybe I should be putting messages into this.' And she said, `Well you're not a message person. Just give them something that's fun to read." At the time, 1962, recalled Norma, paperback children's books weren't so easy to find, and "a lot of kids couldn't have books because they were too expensive." For her part, the 51-year-old Emily Elizabeth of Carlisle, Mass., cites Clifford as part of the reason she became a preschool teacher. "As I got older and as I started to meet parents who really loved the books, they would express to me how much they meant to their family and how much they meant to their children. Then I started to realize it was something special." Bridwell's granddaughter, 17-year-old Alissa, also attended the party. She thought the Clifford stories were just for her growing up. "I didn't get that everybody else had them, too," she said. "I thought it was just this special thing between me and my grandpa."
[Associated
Press;
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