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Terry 's Reviews > Watership Down

Watership Down by Richard  Adams
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it was amazing
bookshelves: favorites, fantasy, desert-island-picks
Read 5 times. Last read September 7, 2012 to September 17, 2012.

I think there are generally two classes of people when it comes to this book: those who see beyond the surface and love it, and those who just don't get it and wonder how anyone can praise a silly book about talking rabbits.

Given my rating of it, I obviously fall into the former group. On the surface this is an engaging tale about a group of outcast rabbits who leave their warren at the promptings of one of their fellows who is able to foresee a great catastrophe on the horizon. Their adventures are varied and engaging, both while they trek to the place they will eventually call home (the eponymous Watership Down), and as they attempt to search for does to help re-populate their new warren from the militaristic Efrafa.

Adams does a neat trick in dealing with his rabbit characters. They are not quite humans and the way they try to puzzle out the world around them in a very animal-like way makes them more than just people in bunny-suits, though at the same time they are human-like, and varied, enough to engage the reader. They have their own language (with words and concepts derived from their understanding of the world), and perhaps most engagingly, they tell stories and myths based on their beloved folk-hero El-ahrairah. These stories, peppered throughout the book as chapters, are some of the most enjoyable parts of the tale and add a depth and interest to the rabbits and their 'culture' that is very endearing.

The rabbits themselves fill certain archetypal roles (the leader, the warrior, the seer, the scientist, the villain) while at the same time retaining individual characters and even developing as the story progresses. This is definitely not a children's story of 'fluffy wabbits' even if only taken at surface level; and when looked at below the surface it is a satisfying and fulfilling tale well worthy of the title "classic".

Re-read, September, 2012: Yup, this is still a fantastic read. Man, that ending always gets me *sniff*. I think what really makes this story sing are the layers. Everything builds on all that came before it, whether it's plot, character, or theme. We grow to love a group of characters that may at first have seemed rather silly and what had started out as a simple here-to-there quest turns into, for me at least, something much more. Oh and one other thing: Bigwig is the man, his last stand against Woundwort is an amazing moment, but there's a reason why Hazel was Chief Rabbit.
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Reading Progress

Finished Reading
Finished Reading
July 15, 2008 – Shelved
July 7, 2011 – Shelved as: favorites
September 23, 2011 – Shelved as: fantasy
September 7, 2012 – Started Reading
September 7, 2012 –
page 29
6.07%
September 8, 2012 –
page 29
6.07%
September 8, 2012 –
page 105
21.97%
September 10, 2012 –
page 182
38.08%
September 11, 2012 –
page 263
55.02%
September 14, 2012 –
page 309
64.64%
September 15, 2012 –
page 382
79.92%
September 17, 2012 – Finished Reading
January 6, 2017 – Started Reading (Paperback Edition)
January 26, 2017 – Shelved (Paperback Edition)
January 26, 2017 – Shelved as: fantasy (Paperback Edition)
January 26, 2017 – Shelved as: favorites (Paperback Edition)
January 26, 2017 – Finished Reading (Paperback Edition)
August 1, 2018 – Shelved as: desert-island-picks (Paperback Edition)
August 1, 2018 – Shelved as: desert-island-picks
April 18, 2021 – Started Reading (Paperback Edition)
May 19, 2021 – Finished Reading (Paperback Edition)

Comments Showing 1-28 of 28 (28 new)

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Jeffrey Keeten I need to give this a look.


Terry This is one of my all-time favourites.


Mark great book. great review


Kate Sherrod I'm always sort of stunned when I have to explain what "hrair" means. Such a useful term, that. And only five characters!


Terry Indeed Kate! I love all of Adams' made-up lapine words and the whole rabbit culture he created, it's the real hraka!


message 6: by Kris (last edited Sep 07, 2012 05:34AM) (new) - rated it 5 stars

Kris Wonderful review, Terry. You captured so much of what I love about this book. I read it to pieces when I was young. I have to revisit it.

BTW, have you read Duncton Wood? Not as good as Watership Down, but I remember being absorbed by it when I read it as a teenager.


Terry Thanks Kris! No, I haven't read that one, though I have seen it many times. For some reason or other I've avoided pretty much every 'talking animal' book that took _Watership Down_ as its model. I think part of me has a hard time believing anyone will do justice to the idea in the way Adams did and produce anything other than a "people in animal suits" story. For my money Adams wins for two reasons: he manages to make his rabbits unique and distinctly not-human even while he makes them understandable, and he ties that in with a compelling story.


Kris Laughing here - I agree with you about the many dangers and pitfalls in trying to recapture the magic of a loved book by seeking out other book that seem similar, especially when talking animals are involved. I think the key to Adams is, as you said, his ability to make the rabbits so complex and interesting, and not human. I think Horwood comes closer to anthropomorphizing the moles - but again, it's been decades since I read him, so I may be doing him a disservice.


Terence "Tharn" has to be one of the most useful words added to the English lexicon since Shakespeare's day :-)


Terry I agree Terence :) I think Adams did a great job on his language...even if it was only a few words. I just discovered that others have gone ahead and expanded Lapine into a much fuller language...weird.


Jason Koivu Great review Terry! I need to read this one. I loved the cartoon version with the Art Garfunkel lament song, but man, talk about *sniff*! This, Old Yeller, and Charlotte's Web were favorites of my teachers in elementary school. I swear they liked to play the movies for us just to watch us all cry. Sadistic.


Terence Jason wrote: "Great review Terry! I need to read this one. I loved the cartoon version with the Art Garfunkel lament song, but man, talk about *sniff*! This, Old Yeller, and Charlotte's Web were favorites of my ..."

Did your sadistic elementary school teachers ever screen for their little charges a movie called JT? It's about an Afr-Amer kid and a cat he befriends; you can imagine how things turn out. My sadistic teachers showed it to us in 2nd grade.


message 13: by [deleted user] (new)

Great review. I am one of the people who get this book.


Jason Koivu Terence wrote: "Jason wrote: "Great review Terry! I need to read this one. I loved the cartoon version with the Art Garfunkel lament song, but man, talk about *sniff*! This, Old Yeller, and Charlotte's Web were fa..."

No, never even heard of JT, but yes, I can imagine. I understand wanting to teaching a lesson about life and death. That's fine. But really they needed to stop after the first one, maybe two. Oh no, they had to pound that shit home!


Terry Jason wrote: "Great review Terry! I need to read this one. I loved the cartoon version with the Art Garfunkel lament song, but man, talk about *sniff*! ..."

Thanks Jason. I have to admit that I first came to the story through the movie. My big brother took me to a double-feature of it and Bakshi's Fellowship of the Ring movie. I'm apparently one of the few kids who saw the movie who didn't hate it based on the vitriol I generally see when the movie is mentioned.

That said the book is obviously leagues better!


Terry Steve wrote: "Great review. I am one of the people who get this book."

Thanks Steve...we few, we happy few!


Jason Koivu Terry wrote: "Jason wrote: "Great review Terry! I need to read this one. I loved the cartoon version with the Art Garfunkel lament song, but man, talk about *sniff*! ..."

Thanks Jason. I have to admit that I f..."


Don't get me wrong, I love the movie (and Bakshi's "Fellowship..."!). It just used to (and probably still would) make me all weepy.


message 18: by Mark (new) - rated it 4 stars

Mark Loved the review the first time i read it and just as you re-read and loved the book so I re-read and loved the review. sadly i can't vote a second time. WD is a great book for its deeper meaning but come on it is also about rabbits so who couldn't love it !!


Terry Wow, thanks very much Mark! It's autumn and I find myself in a re-reading mood.


Terry Whose bunny freedom were you worried about Kat? Hazel's group managed to retain theirs :)


Heath Churchland "bright eyes", fantastic book!!


message 22: by Mary (new) - rated it 5 stars

Mary Franklin Wonderful review! Thanks for sharing.


Terry Thanks Mary!


Stuart My absolute favorite story growing up since my dad read it to me over many months as a bedtime story, and I then did the same for my daughter when she was 7-8 years old. Epic, exciting, funny (El-ahrairah), intense (Big Wig vs. General Woundwart), and moving. Worth all 5 stars and more!


Terry Indeed Stuart! I love this book more and more each time I come back to it.


message 26: by Isaiah (new) - added it

Isaiah My teacher said the same comment! (there are two groups of people)


Anne ✨ Finds Joy Great review! An all-time favorite book for me!


Terry Thanks Anne, obviously it's one of mine as well!


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