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Indlæser... Watership Down: A Novel (original 1972; udgave 2005)af Richard Adams
Work InformationKaninbjerget af Richard Adams (1972)
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A delightful book, even better the second time around. This classic tale has something relatable for everyone. While yes the characters are rabbits, the overall tale is one that can easily be applied to people as far as a tale of survival and perseverance. The story shows the resilience and determination. Sensing danger a brave group dares to set out and build a new home. Just as many refugees, the rabbits have their struggles yet their legends and myths help guide them and by sticking together they succeed. There are lessons throughout this book that can teach us all something. My brother bought this for me as I had said that I had always wanted to read it as a child and never had. I was surprised at how much I enjoyed it! I know it's been said before, but it has a lot in common with post-apocalyptic fiction, which has come so much more into vogue in the decades since this was written. A lot of lessons on leadership too, for those into that kinda thing. 2.5 stars The story was meh - I had a hard time getting into it, as the pace was so very slow in the beginning. It finally began to pick up about 1/2 or 2/3 of the way through. I have to say, the fact that Adams felt it necessary to make up a rabbit "language" was strange to me, and it only served to make the story even more confusing (and long) in the beginning, when he has to keep explaining what these made-up words mean. I normally love it when books have quotes at the beginning at the chapter - it adds a certain depth. I often end up liking the quotes more than the book itself, even. But this book had many quotes included that were in foreign languages, and no English translation was given - this didn't make any sense to me. Also, there was a bit of language, particularly the D-word, along with made-up profanity. This was so unnecessary! It was okay - I'm glad to be done with it, since it's been on my to-read list for so long - but I just wouldn't recommend it to anyone. One quote I did like: "Many human beings say that they enjoy the winter, but what they really enjoy is feeling proof against it. For them there is no winter food problem. They have fires and warm clothes. The winter cannot hurt them and therefore increases their sense of cleverness and security. For birds and animals, as for poor men, winter is another matter." (p. 465)
Watership Down offers little to build a literary cult upon. On the American-whimsy exchange, one Tolkien hobbit should still be worth a dozen talking rabbits. This bunny-rabbit novel not only steers mostly clear of the usual sticky, anthropomorphic pitfalls of your common garden-variety of bunny rabbit story: it is also quite marvelous for a while, and after it stops being marvelous, it settles down to be pretty good- a book you can live with from start to finish. It simply isn't possible. At this date, you cannot write a story about rabbits, 413 pages long, and hold a reader riveted. But Richard Adams has done exactly that in Watership Down (Rex Collings, £3.50). This is a great book, establishing a more than plausible and totally fascinating psychology and physiology for its rabbits, together with their own mythology and language. It sounds formidable, perhaps; yet what one's aware of, reading, is a story of the most exciting kind, remaining taut over all those pages. It's set in a precise part of Berkshire (map provided) – the hejira of a group of rabbits who accept a clairvoyant companion’s prophecy that their warren will be destroyed; their establishment of a new home and their search for mates – this leading to war with a warren ruled by the protectively totalitarian General Woundwort. A whole world is created, perfectly real in itself, yet constituting a deep incidental comment on human affairs. Indeholdt iHar tilpasningenInspireretIndeholder elevguideHæderspriserDistinctionsNotable Lists
En fabel om en flok hankaniner, der bryder op fra deres koloni, før den udryddes, og om deres strabadser og eventyr, mens de forsøger at skabe en ny. No library descriptions found. |
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![]() GenrerMelvil Decimal System (DDC)823.914Literature English & Old English literatures English fiction Modern Period 1901-1999 1945-1999LC-klassificeringVurderingGennemsnit:![]()
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Awards: Mythopoeic Fantasy Award Nominee (1975), Guardian Children's Fiction Prize (1973), Audie Award Nominee for Best Male Narrator (2020), Boston Globe-Horn Book Award (1975), California Young Readers Medal for Young Adult (1977), Carnegie Medal (1972)