

But children, their parents, teachers and librarians had found something endearing about the story - perhaps Clifford’s loyalty to his owner, Emily Elizabeth, or her faithfulness to him. Mr. Bridwell’s classic character, a bloodhound the size of a house and the color of a fire engine, joined the literary animal kingdom in 1963 with the publication of “Clifford the Big Red Dog.” With text and illustrations by Mr. Bridwell, it was his first storybook.Īt the time, he was struggling to support his family as a commercial artist in New York, and he dismissed the book’s success as a fluke. The cause was a recurrence of prostate cancer, said his wife, Norma Bridwell. Norman Bridwell, the children’s author and illustrator who created Clifford the Big Red Dog, the clumsy, lovable canine who has helped teach millions of youngsters how to read, and how to face the world, died Dec. 12 at a hospital near his home on Martha’s Vineyard, Mass.
