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Title: Watership Down
Author: Richard Adams
Genre: Classic YA
Thingummies: 3

Synopsis: Rabbits escape the destruction of their old warren and try to find a new one.

Thoughts: I kept hearing references to this book, so I figured I finally had to get around to reading it. I'm still not entirely sure how I feel about it.

There appears to be a sub-genre of children's literature in which the characters' home is destroyed and they have to go adventuring until they finally make a new one. The Borrowers, the Bromeliad trilogy, The Rats of NIMH, and so on. I'm not sure if Watership Down kicked this off, but it's certainly an early example. And in a lot of ways, this is great children's literature. Adventure and great tension, some gorgeous descriptions, memorable characters.

I think a lot of my ambivalence comes from how the does are treated. Yes, I realize that the author based a bunch of this on real rabbit behavior. But real rabbits don't form military juntas or cooperate with seagulls, so it's not like he was completely constrained here. And the female characters are so very much treated like harem slaves that I found it deeply uncomfortable. They're passive and silly, praised entirely for their looks, unmourned when they die, and wanted solely as breeding stock. One rabbit abandons his "wife" in the land of the Lotus Eaters and never even tries to convince her to escape or thinks of her ever again. I realize this was written in the 70s. But the fact that it was originally written for two little girls and the author barely considers the female characters to be more than sex objects in the most literal sense is a bit horrifying.

If you can get past that, though, it's otherwise delightful. But I'm not entirely sure I'd be comfortable reading this to my kids. If I did, I think we'd probably have a marathon of Anne of Green Gables and A Little Princess and The Secret Garden immediately afterwards.

Date: 2013-06-14 11:23 pm (UTC)From: [identity profile] jethrien.livejournal.com
I suspect in 3rd grade, you wouldn't have noticed the sexism and would have loved this book. It's a great adventure. I'm not sure it's the best thing for a kid to read, but you would have really liked it.

(I also was obsessed with Redwall. Totally reading at least the first couple to ARR, when he's old enough. I hope they hold up. I do remember the later ones got kind of repetitive, but at least the first few seemed wonderful. My mom read a couple of them to us, and did different voices for all the animals and it was awesome.)

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