A skilled hound relentlessly hunts. A clever fox nimbly eludes him. They spend their lives in an endless game of cat-and-mouse, each learning from the other's mistakes. Tod the fox is sly and learns quickly, and having been raised by man knows his tricks. But Copper the hound and his master continually have new tricks up their sleeve, and it's only a matter of time before Tod and his family can no longer outrun a pack of bloodhounds.
Even compared to all my other Disney source material read-through selections, this book was an interesting experience, for many reasons. 1) It's out of print and was nearly impossible to find at any library, even through inter-library loan, so I had to use some creative means to find a copy of it, 2) It's very dense and realistic, with almost no dialogue at all, and 3) It's the first time I read a book and wondered how and why anyone would finish it and say to themselves, "I think that would make a great Disney movie. Don't get me wrong, the 1981 animated film will always hold a special place in my heart, and I think the story in the movie works, but it barely resembles Mannix's story of the non-stop, single-minded, vicious hunt. There are a few elements here and there that you can tell they took and incorporated into their version, but if I didn't know any better I wouldn't really think it's suited for children's media (shows what I know... maybe that's why I'm not a Disney story guy). In any case, this book is gritty and interesting, but at the same time it's a bit tedious and repetitive. The chapters alternate between the hunter and the hunted, and Tod's chapters were very much about everyday life for a fox in the forest, including the minutiae of finding food, fighting rivals, mating, etc. Copper's chapters seemed a little more focused on the details of scenting and catching game, with just a little detail about hound dog life. I don't know, I kept thinking it was sort of documentaryish and dictionaryish, kind of like Moby-Dick but about wilderness quadrupeds instead (except without the same kind of compelling characters and human drama). The animal characters felt real and were not anthropomorphized at all, which was refreshing but at the same time made them feel distant and made it hard to really care about what happened to them. It wasn't terrible, and the writing was decent, but it plodded along and ended rather abruptly, and pretty vaguely. I also felt like I was being suddenly preached to in the last 25 pages or so, which I just wasn't expecting, and which I didn't think was very fitting with the rest of the story.
I have no idea who first read this book and decided it would make a great Disney movie, because that's definitely not the feeling it left me with (but it did anyway, so maybe what do I know?). It has a few bare-bones elements that were significantly altered and adapted and incorporated into the animated version, but mostly it's a long, heavy, sometimes interesting, sometimes not story about a relentless hunter and his undaunted prey, and their natural, lifelong mutual animosity.
P.S. This was my first experience reading an ebook, and I basically hated almost everything about it, so there is that.