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Get first look inside new Dr. Seuss book ‘What Pet Should I Get?’

Posted at 10:10 AM, Apr 20, 2015
and last updated 2015-04-20 12:10:31-04

The announcement this year of a new, original Dr. Seuss book sent a wave of nostalgic giddiness across Twitter, and months before publication, the number of pre-orders for “What Pet Should I Get?” continues to climb.New Dr. Seuss book to be published

To keep up with demand, the book’s first printing was increased from 500,000 to 1 million copies, Barbara Marcus, president and publisher of Random House Children’s Books, said in a news release Monday.

“We were absolutely overjoyed to see the response to ‘What Pet Should I Get?’ from every corner of the book world — the bookselling community, media, educators, and readers nationwide,” Marcus said.

The publisher also released to CNN a never-before-seen image from the new volume by Dr. Seuss, aka Theodor Geisel. It features a brother and sister familiar to Seuss fans as they ogle a prim feline in a pet shop window and ponder:

“We want a pet.
We want a pet.
What kind of pet
should we get?”

When “What Pet Should I Get?” debuts July 28, it will be the first new, original Dr. Seuss book since “Oh, the Places You’ll Go!” in 1990. It features the spirited siblings from the beloved classic “One Fish Two Fish Red Fish Blue Fish” and is believed to have been written between 1958 and 1962.

“Ted loved and had pets himself, as a young boy on up through adulthood, and that makes the wonderful excitement and buzz for this new book all the more special,” said Susan Brandt, president, licensing and marketing of Dr. Seuss Enterprises.Original art from the upcoming What Pet Should I Get? book

Geisel’s widow, Audrey Geisel, found the manuscript and illustrations in their California home soon after her husband died in 1991. The materials were set aside and then rediscovered in 2013. Random House Children’s Books said in February that it expects to release additional books from the found materials.

It only seems to prove the brother and sister’s lesson from “One Fish Two Fish Red Fish Blue Fish.”

“From there to here,
from here to there,
funny things
are everywhere.”

By Jamie Gumbrecht for CNN