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Reviews tagging 'Injury/Injury detail'
Unten am Fluss - »Watership Down«: Roman | Ein ergreifendes Spiegelbild der Gesellschaft und die fesselnde Geschichte eines langen Weges in die Freiheit by Richard Adams
27 reviews
Graphic: Animal cruelty, Animal death, Blood
Moderate: Injury/Injury detail
Graphic: Animal death, Torture, Injury/Injury detail
Moderate: Gun violence, Excrement
Graphic: Animal cruelty, Animal death, Body horror, Bullying, Confinement, Death, Emotional abuse, Genocide, Gore, Miscarriage, Panic attacks/disorders, Physical abuse, Sexism, Torture, Violence, Forced institutionalization, Xenophobia, Blood, Kidnapping, Grief, Stalking, Murder, Pregnancy, Abandonment, War, Injury/Injury detail
I really enjoyed the story as a whole - the world building is grand, the characters are worth rooting for, and the action really builds. I only have two complaints, one more so than the other. The first, and least annoying to me personally, was that the action really picked up in the second half; so much so that it almost felt like two different story paces. The second, and more frustrating for me, was that there were often long passages that droned on with excessive detail about the setting. As someone who has a hard time picturing things in my head as they are exactly described, I prefer vivid imagery that still leaves much to the imagination. Richard Adams tends to over describe with so much detail that it becomes convoluted and I lose the image trying to follow the words. I tended to glaze over those passages, which could often be at least a page long.
Graphic: Animal death, Death, Violence, Injury/Injury detail
Moderate: Gore, Blood
Graphic: Animal death, Death, Violence, Blood, Injury/Injury detail
Moderate: Confinement, Classism
Minor: Miscarriage, Abortion, Pregnancy
Graphic: Animal death, Injury/Injury detail
Moderate: Blood
Beloved as a classic children’s story, Watership Down is the tale of Hazel, Fiver, Bigwig, and their friends, a group of rabbits who face relocation, danger, and adventure together on the quest to find and build a new home for themselves.
I was a huge fan of the Warriors series growing up, and this book gave me very similar vibes, only with rabbits rather than cats, so the nostalgia feeling that this book generated was a lot of fun. I loved the adventure and action (which picked up significantly towards the second half) and all the different rabbit characters were a delight. I did feel like the book could have been about a hundred pages shorter, but I also appreciated the world-building Adams engaged in, as well as the inclusion of rabbit folklore and mythology. While I wasn’t totally enthralled (a lot of sections dragged on and the beginning was pretty slow), I definitely understand why this one is so loved by so many readers over the years.
As an added bonus, with bunnies and outdoorsy vibes, this was the perfect springtime/Easter read!
Recommended if you like: classics; stories about animals; children’s literature.
CW: Animal injury/death/blood; violence.
Moderate: Animal death, Violence, Blood, Injury/Injury detail