Tales from Watership Down

Richard Adams, 1920-2016

Book - 2012

"Tales From Watership Down is the enchanting sequel to Richard Adams's bestselling Watership Down, the enduring classic of contemporary literature that introduced millions of readers to a vivid and distinctive world. Here, he returns to the delightful characters we know and love--including Fiver, Hazel, Bigwig, Dandelion, and the legendary rabbit hero El-ahrairah--and presents new heroes as they struggle to survive the cruelties of nature and the shortsighted selfishness of humankind. These whimsical tales include all-new adventures and traditional stories of rabbit mythology, charming us once again with imagination, heart, and wonder. A spellbinding book of courage and survival, Tales From Watership Down is an exciting invitation... to come home to a beloved world"--Page 4 of cover.

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Subjects
Genres
Fantasy fiction
Fiction
Published
New York : Vintage Books, a division of Random House, Inc 2012.
Language
English
Main Author
Richard Adams, 1920-2016 (-)
Edition
First Vintage books edition
Item Description
Originally published: New York : Alfred A. Knopf, 1996.
Physical Description
viii, 267 pages ; 21 cm
ISBN
9780307950192
  • The sense of smell
  • The story of the three cows
  • The story of the King Fur-Rocious
  • The fox in the water
  • The hole in the sky
  • The rabbit's ghost story
  • Speedwell's story
  • The story of the comical field
  • The story of the great marsh
  • The story of the terrible hay-making
  • El-ahrairah and the Lendri
  • The secret river
  • The new warren
  • Flyairth
  • Flyairth's depature
  • Hyzenthlay in action
  • Sandwort
  • Stonecrop
  • Campion
  • Lapine glossary.
Review by Booklist Review

Since its publication in 1974, Watership Down has been beloved by readers of all ages. Now more than 20 years later, Adams offers a sequel of sorts in this collection of lyrically written tales, many of which concern the exploits of the rabbit folk hero El-ahrairah (The Prince with a Thousand Enemies). The tales are presented in three sections: the first consisting of five traditional stories about El-ahrairah, together with two nonsense tales; the second containing four stories about El-ahrairah and his companion Rabscuttle's arduous journey home from their fearful encounter with the Black Rabbit of Inle; and the third offering eight pieces about Hazel, Fiver, Bigwig, and the other rabbits in Hazel's warren. Adams continues his theme of wildlife preservation, with humankind remaining the preeminent enemy, and expands on the elaborate mythology that played so large a role in Watership Down. His memorable animal personalities are still very talky and carry their anthropomorphism with the same grace. This will be a sure hit with all those who have loved the first book. (Reviewed Sept. 1, 1996)0679451250Sally Estes

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

As readers of Watership Down (1974) will recall, Adams reached classic heights of inspired storytelling in that fable of the animal kingdom, performing a finely calibrated juggling act between the real and the imagined. These 19 interrelated tales continue the adventures of the rabbits met in the earlier book, after their defeat of General Woundwart and the Efrafans. The deeds of the hero El-ahrairah are celebrated in the seven stories of Part One (of three). El-ahrairah's stalwart companion Rabscuttle joins him for four tales in Part Two, while the remaining stories, which are devoted to Hazel and his rabbits, have the continuity of a novel. Mystical, occasionally allegorical, full of whimsy, rich in vivid descriptions of the rabbits' society and of the natural world, the tales are often suspenseful, frequently amusing and invariably clever. The rabbits exhibit a wide range of behavior, showing themselves to be manipulative, defiant, ignorant and self-satisfied, along with noble, loving and brave. There is a brief summation of what happened in the initial passages of the first tale, but from there on, the book stands on its own. El-ahrairah's heroic exploits include his perilous journey to obtain a sense of smell for all rabbits and his search for eternal youth, while his adventures with Rabscuttle find them both leading another group of rabbits across a dangerous marsh as they attempt to evade an army of rapacious, savage rats. Eventually, a new warren is founded and various other ones reconfigure and recombine. The collection comes to a satisfying close by ending, as it began, with an account of the bold deeds of another heroic rabbit, formerly an enemy, now a valued member of the new warren. Illustrations not seen by PW. 200,000 first printing. (Nov.) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Library Journal Review

Rabbits 1, General Woundwort 0; what happened after Watership Down. (c) Copyright 2010. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by School Library Journal Review

YA‘A delightful collection of 24 tales for readers who enjoyed the fantastical warren of Watership Down popularized so many years ago, or who just want an uplifting and heartwarming animal story. A glossary lists rabbit words found throughout the tales, but readers can readily understand these terms in context. The collection is divided into three parts: traditional tales that help to explain how things came to be in the rabbit world; some of the adventures encountered by El-aharairah (rabbit folk hero) and his comrades on their return trip home after defeating the Black Rabbit of Inle; and a continuation of the story of Watership Down and its many inhabitants. Familiar characters reappear: Hazel, Bigwig, Dandelion, Bluebell, and Campion. Events from the earlier novel are referred to‘the encounter with General Woundwort, the destruction of Efrafa, and the establishment of Watership Down‘but knowledge of them is not necessary to appreciate this book. Substitute human experiences for the rabbits' and the simple action becomes the stuff of fable, and an allegory of humankind. While younger children will enjoy the surface tales, more mature readers will understand the underlying themes.‘Dottie Kraft, formerly at Fairfax County Public Schools, VA (c) Copyright 2010. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

1. The Sense of Smell "...noses have they, but they smell not." --Psalm 115 "Who dares wins." --Motto of the special air service "Tell us a story, Dandelion!" It was a fine May evening of the spring following the defeat of General Woundwort and the Efrafans on Watership Down. Hazel and several of his veterans--those who had been with him ever since leaving Sandalford--were lying on the warm turf, full of grass and comfortably relaxed. Nearby, Kehaar was pecking among the low tussocks, not so much feeding as using up the day's remains of his continual, relentless energy. The rabbits had been chatting together, recalling some of their grand adventures of the previous year: how they had left the Sandleford warren under fiver's warning of imminent disaster; how they had first come to Watership Down and dug their new warren, only to realize that there was not a single doe among them. Hazel had recalled the ill-judged raid on Nuthanger Farm, in which he had nearly lost his life. This had reminded several of them of their journey to the great river, and Bigwig had told yet again of the time he had spent in Efrafa as a supposed officer of General Woundwort; and how he had persuaded Hyzenthlay to form the group of does who had broken out in the thunderstorm. Blackberry had tried but could not explain his trick with the boat, which had enabled them to escape down the river. Bigwig, however, had refused to tell of his underground fight with General Woundwort, insisting that he wanted only to forget it; so instead, Dandelion had recounted how the Nuthanger dog, let loose by Hazel, had pursued him and Blackberry into the midst of the Efrafans gathered on the Down. He had hardly finished, when there arose the well-worn cry: "Tell us a story, Dandelion! Tell us a story!" Dandelion did not respond immediately, seemingly reflecting as he nibbled the grass and took a few hops to a sunnier patch before settling himself again. At length he replied, "I think I'll tell you a new story this evening; one that you've never heard before. It's about one of the greatest of all adventurers of El-ahrairah." He paused, sitting up and rubbing his front paws over his nose. No one hurried the master storyteller, who appeared, by taking him time, to be rather relishing his standing among the group. A light breeze stirred the grass, and a lark, ending its song, dropped down near them, paused for a time and then began another ascent. There was a time (said Dandelion), long ago, when rabbits had no sense of smell. They lived as they do now, but to have no sense of smell was a terrible disadvantage. Half the pleasure of a summer morning was lost to them, and they couldn't pick out their food in the grass until they actually bit into it. Worst ofall, they couldn't smell their enemies coming, and this meant that many rabbits fell victim to stoats and foxes. Now, El-ahrairah perceived that although his rabbits had no sense of smell, their enemies and other creatures--even the birds--possessed it, and he determined that he would seek out that extra sense and win it for his people, whatever the cost. He began to seek advice everywhere he could, asking where the sense of smell was to be found. But no one knew, until at last he asked a very od, wise rabbit in his warren, named Heartsease. "I can only recall that when I was young, " said Heartsease, "our warren gave shelter to a wounded swallow--one who had traveled far and wide. He pitied us because we had no sense of smell, and he told us that the way to the sense of smell lies through a land of perpetual darkness, where it is guarded, he said, by a band of fierce and dangerous creatures known as the Ilips, who live in a cave. More than this he did not know." El-ahrairah thanked Heartsea and, after deliberating for a long time, when to see Prince Rainbow. He told him that he meant to go to that land and asked him for his advice. "You had much better not attempt it, El-ahrairah," said Prince Rainbow. "How do you think you are going to find your way through a land of perpetual darkness to a place you don't know? Even I have never been there, and what's more, I don't intend ever to do so. You'll only be throwing your life away." "It's for my people," replied El-ahrairah. "I'm not prepared to see them hunted down day after day for want of a sense of smell. Is there no advice you can give me?" "Only this," said Prince Rainbow. "Don't tell anyone that you meet on your journey why you are going. There are some very strange creatures in that country, and if it were to become known that you had no sense of smell. It might well be the worse for you. Invent some purpose. Wait--I'll give you this astral collar to wear around your neck. It was a gift to me from Lord Frith. It may just possibly help you." El-ahrairah thanked Prince Rainbow, and the next day he set out. When at length he came to the border of the land of perpetual darkness, he found that it began with twilight, which deepened until all around was dark. He could not tell which wa to go, and what was worse, he could form no sense of direction, so that for all he knew, he might be going in circles. He could hear other creatures moving in the dark around him, and as far as he could tell, they seemed to know what they were doing. But were they friendly. And would it be safe to talk to any of them? At last, in sheer desperation, he sat down in the dark and waited in silence until he heard come creature moving nearby. Then he said, "I'm lost and confused. Can you help me?" He heard the creature stop, and after a few moments it replied in a strange but just understandable tongue. "Why are you lost? Where have you come from and where do you want to go?" "I've come from a land where they have daylight," answered El-ahrairah, "and I'm lost because I can't see and I'm not used to this darkness." "But can't you smell your way? We all can." El-ahrairah was about to answer that he had no sense of smell, but then he remembered Prince Rainbow's warning. So he said, "I'm afraid the smells are all different here. They only confuse me." "So you've no idea what sort of creature I am, for instance?" "Not the least. But you don't seem fierce, that's one blessing." El-ahrairah heard the creature sit down. After a little, it said, "I'm a glanbrin. Are there any where you come from?" "No. I'm afraid I've never heard of a glanbrin. I'm a rabbit." " I've never heard of a rabbit. Let me sniff you over." El-ahrairah kept as still as he could while the creature, which was furry and seemed to be about the same size as himself, sniffed him over carefully from head to foot. At last it said, "Well, you seem to be very much the same sort of animal as I am. You're not a beast of pretty and you obviously have a very strong sense of hearing. What do you eat?" "Grass." "There isn't any here. Grass won't grow in the dark. We eat roots. But I think you and I are very much alike. Don't you want to have a sniff too?" El-ahrairah pretended to sniff all over the glanbrin. In doing so, he found that it had no eyes; that is, what might have been its eyes were hard, small land sunken, almost lost in its head. But for all that, he thought, "Well, if this isn't some sort of rabbit, then I'm a badger." He said, "I don't believe there's anything much to choose between us, except that I..." He was about to say "can't smell" but checked himself and finished, "that I'm utterly confused and lost in this darkness." Excerpted from Tales from Watership Down by Richard Adams All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.