book data
11992 ratings, 4.17 average rating, 1428 reviews
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published
November 1st 2005
(first published 1972)
by Scribner
binding
Paperback, 496 pages
isbn
0743277708
(isbn13: 9780743277709)
description
Watership Down has been a staple of high-school English classes for years. Despite the fact that it's often a hard sell at first (what teenager...more
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other reviews (showing 1-20 of 15012)
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avg 4.17
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Read in January, 2002
recommends it for:
People who like a good story or who have a vague interest in rabbits
Ok, so it's a book about a bunch of rabbits traveling through a small stretch of English countryside. As such, it doesn't seem like something that would appeal to anyone but a preteen. But the fact of the matter is this is a great story, full of rich characters, a deep (if occasionally erroneous) understanding of things lupine, and it can reach moments of depth and profundity that the movie of the same title does not even begin to hint at. I was actually introduced to this book in one of the bes...more
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ricosbooks
Read in June, 2000
recommends it for:
people, rabbits, not for sailors.
oh man, this book totally tricked me! I got a bad haircut one day so I needed to lay low for a few weeks ("Supercuts", my ass! Liars!). I called two of my hardest, most straight-up thug homies (Zachary and Dustin) to bring me some of their books and this was one of them. I had just watched a show on A&E about WWII naval battles so I couldn't WAIT to read Watership Down! I love sea stories, "man overboard!" and "off the port bow!" and "aye aye cap'n!&qu...more
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Read in July, 1986
recommends it for:
Anyone
It was the summer of 1986 when, rumaging through the long unused bedrooms of my grandfather's house, I stumbled upon the book Watership Down. At twelve, I was at that wonderful age when any book was a source of fascination rather than embarrassment, and so I sat upon my uncle's old bed and, in the dusty sunlight streaming through the window, began to read a book which would stay with me years later.
Fiver, a small and nervous rabbit, is plaugued by visions of the coming destruction of Sandl...more
Fiver, a small and nervous rabbit, is plaugued by visions of the coming destruction of Sandl...more
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50-book-challenge--08
Read in January, 2008
While I was trying to put together a preliminary list for the books I was going to try to read this year I came across the title Watership Down a hundred times. I’ll admit that when I first came across it I thought it was going to be a space adventure. Much like the movie Ice Pirates, I thought it was going to be about a over laden supply ship crashing in enemy territory with the only know water supply that existed in the galaxy, or at least something like that. As it turns out the book contai...more
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Read in January, 1999
Adapted from ISawLightningFall.blogspot.com
Watership Down has a lot in common with the ancient epics. In it, a lone warrior leads a band of harried outcasts into the wilderness in search of a home. They’re aided by a seer who can touch the future with his dreams. They face perilous quests and hair-breadth escapes, ferocious foes and desperate siege assaults. But unlike the works of Homer and Virgil, Watership Down is also about rabbits. Which is appropriate, as almost all of ...more
Watership Down has a lot in common with the ancient epics. In it, a lone warrior leads a band of harried outcasts into the wilderness in search of a home. They’re aided by a seer who can touch the future with his dreams. They face perilous quests and hair-breadth escapes, ferocious foes and desperate siege assaults. But unlike the works of Homer and Virgil, Watership Down is also about rabbits. Which is appropriate, as almost all of ...more
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Going to read it for Skinner. And I have to do a book project on it. Everyone says it's boring.
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Read in May, 2008
This review has been hidden because it contains spoilers. To view it, click here.
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Read in January, 1993
recommends it for:
Anyone looking to rekindle their love for books
There are many holes in my life when it comes to memory, holes that one can fill with a Buick. I don't remember my first kiss. I don't even remember all the places I've visited and lived in. Yet, I do remember the film that sparked my love for movies (Indiana Jones), and the one book that made me a life-long reader. Watership Down is that book. Even 15 years later, I remember how I felt when the "unimportant" Hazel lead a group of rabbits to a better and new life. I remember t...more
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Read in August, 2006
Probably the greatest fantasy/adventure book I have ever read just happens to be for young adults and is about talking rabbits in search of a new home. I initially thought I'd be overcome with unintentional laughter and an inability to suspend my disbelief. I thought wrong. By the book's end, when this ragtag collection of refugees from the obliterated Sandleford warren reaches the end of their journey, I was figuratively elevating Mr Adams to the gold medal platform of fantasy writers, just ...more
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Read in January, 2008
recommended to John by:
Ericarecommends it for: Fantasy readers, young readers
The adorable and highly creative anthropomorphic novel of a group of rabbits that seek out a new home. Playing on staples of heroic fantasy (mystical visions, warrior castes, frail but brave protagonists) and granting the rabbits human intelligence but a very rich culture, Adams creates a world more believable than much Fantasy about humans. It's very easy to get lost in their optimistic, sweet realm of simple concerns, where human affairs are almost as unknowable as those of gods, and everyone ...more
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Read in October, 2007
This is undoubtedly a heroic tale on par with the odyssey. How wonderful it is to so thoroughly enjoy a story for its journey and additionally be swept away occasionally by the unique picture of the world it shows you. As daily life consumes you, you tend to forget to imagine the world as it is seen by the small, but when you revisit it in books such as this, you remember that you spent some time there in the past.
How fondly do I think now of Hlao-Roo and Hrairoo, Hazel-rah and pigvig.... t...more
How fondly do I think now of Hlao-Roo and Hrairoo, Hazel-rah and pigvig.... t...more
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Read in April, 2008
recommended to Lisa by:
i read it for mr. skinner's classrecommends it for: people and rabbits
This book is actually really good and better than you'd think it could be, especially since the whole book is from rabbits' points of view. But it was kinda weird at times, and also sometimes boring, but it was still pretty good. i would recomend this book to patient people because its ok at first, but still kinda boring but then *I*(underlined/bolded)think it gets really good..
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you wouldn't think a book about evil bunnies would be good... but you would be wrong.
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Read in October, 2008
I downloaded this as a free E-Book, and had such a different view of it reading it NOW, as opposed to when they tried to make me read it in high school. At the time, the story of talking rabbits was just too annoying for a "suave, sophisticated" high school senior to pay attention to, and I put this book down and didn't think about it again. Now that I'm an adult, the parallels between the rabbit's world and our own are much clearer, and the patience I might have gained with age makes ...more
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Read in August, 2008
I've been trying to think about why I thought so highly of this book - what part of the book made it a definite keeper for me... and I can't really put my finger on it. I know that I like it partly because it has animals as main characters on an adventure, like the _Redwall_ series that I enjoy so much. But, the adventure that Hazel, Fiver, Bigwig and the rest go on is not in the fantasy world (even though the animals talk.. they speak in their own language, and they only do things that rabbit...more
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childrens,
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lit-ra-chur
Read in June, 2008
A friend gave me this book several years ago, and it had been sitting on my bookshelf, unread, ever since. How good can a book about talking bunny rabbits be, I wondered.
Turns out, really quite good. Although there's no denying that this is a book about talking bunny rabbits, it's closer to Lord of the Rings than Peter Cottontail. It's a fantasy adventure novel w...more
Turns out, really quite good. Although there's no denying that this is a book about talking bunny rabbits, it's closer to Lord of the Rings than Peter Cottontail. It's a fantasy adventure novel w...more
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I just picked this book up, but I had thought about reading it for a few years.
My father read it and loved it, and a guy I dated when I was in teacher education school said it was the greatest book ever written. His plan was to teach it. Thing is, he was so boring! So, I didn't particularly want to read it. I also had a bias against it: It would simply capitalize on how sweet bunnies are, and screw that. It would be sentimental!
I found a great explanation of the "problem" of sentim...more
My father read it and loved it, and a guy I dated when I was in teacher education school said it was the greatest book ever written. His plan was to teach it. Thing is, he was so boring! So, I didn't particularly want to read it. I also had a bias against it: It would simply capitalize on how sweet bunnies are, and screw that. It would be sentimental!
I found a great explanation of the "problem" of sentim...more
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Read in April, 2008
OK, a book about talking rabbits? How could that be interesting? you ask. It is. Compelling, even. Read this book, if you haven't already. You could call it an allegory, you could call it a picaresque adventure, but whatever way you look at it, it's entertaining and maybe even thought-provoking.
The first thing that struck me about this book was how much Richard Adams knows about the lives of wild rabbits. What he doesn't know, he fills in very convincingly with rabbit language, culture...more
The first thing that struck me about this book was how much Richard Adams knows about the lives of wild rabbits. What he doesn't know, he fills in very convincingly with rabbit language, culture...more
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Read in April, 2008
recommends it for:
Grant
This was a really good story, and a very enjoyable read. It took me a little while to get used to the fact that I was reading about bunnies, but once I got past that, the book just flew by. The bunnies become characters that you care about, and although I certainly don't think that bunnies in real life are capable of long term planing or anything of that sort, the ones in the story become very defined in their roles.
The rest of this post is for the Lost Book Club people:
I found a few v...more
The rest of this post is for the Lost Book Club people:
I found a few v...more
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Read in November, 2007
Nicky Lenard
Mrs. Ebarvia
World Literature
12/2/07
Book Review
The book that I read is called Watership Down, by Richard Adams. This is the first, and most successful, book that Richard Adams has written. He has also written Nature Through The Seasons, The Phoenix Tree, Daniel, and much more. The book Watership Down is about two rabbits named Hazel and Fiver who leave their home burrow because Fiver believes something bad is going to happen. They get together some of their friends a...more
Mrs. Ebarvia
World Literature
12/2/07
Book Review
The book that I read is called Watership Down, by Richard Adams. This is the first, and most successful, book that Richard Adams has written. He has also written Nature Through The Seasons, The Phoenix Tree, Daniel, and much more. The book Watership Down is about two rabbits named Hazel and Fiver who leave their home burrow because Fiver believes something bad is going to happen. They get together some of their friends a...more
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