Furry Writers' Guild discussion
One book every furry writer should read?
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Jack London's The Call of the Wild and/or White Fang. The reason is very simple. London gets inside the head of the dog or wolf and does so without turning them into humans. He translates into human language without giving any human thought or process to it. While modern furry writing is more anthropomorphic than that (similar to Black Beauty or Watership Down) I think it is essential to good furry writing to understand just where that line lies.
To me the difference between the "animal story" and the "anthropomorphic fiction" is that a furry character combines the instincts, sensory, and physical abilities of the animal with the rational mind of something more human in nature. The crucial element is the ability to override instinct by rational thinking. Animals themselves do this at times, as in cases where say a dog runs into a burning building to bring someone out rather than running from it or hiding. Anthropomorphs are civilized to some extent and would surely need to do this constantly.

With that caveat, I'd strongly suggest both Redwall and Grendel (after authors had read Beowulf) for very different reasons.
While Redwall as a series struggles (and I say this spending years in its respective fandom, talking about its inconsistent world-building and its repetition of character tropes) the original book is still a classic and shows a fully fleshed out anthropomorphic world with a quick narrative and an early introduction to stock characters in their strongest form, and how this type of writing can be used to entertain.
Grendel, on the other hand, is a good answer to Redwall because it shows a better example of what goes through the mind of something non-human with human intelligence and a better presentation of an outcast's introspection. It also isn't afraid to approach philosophical ideas and I think it prepares readers for more adult subject matter than Redwall does.
I think these two books would be a very strong start and they compliment one another very well.


"Watership Down" is good. XP It's one of my top five favorite books.


I highly recommend Dragon's Wild by Robert Aspirin, which is a great novel showing transformation, dragons, and magical-fantasy. Young adults and those interested in more fantasy tales might like the Wings of Fire series, which features anthropomorphic dragons becoming heroes with young, fun personalities and greatly developed worlds and species.
Waterways by Kyell Gold. It's the ur-example for a lot of furry tropes, and if you don't read some of the most popular books in furry, you risk accidentally retreading old ground.


Breed to Come is an apocalyptic Earth after humanity fled to the stars and Left behind a devasted planet. As time passes, the remaining animals evolve into a type of Stone Age societies, with the cats (known as the People), the dogs are called Barkers and the rats known as Ratten. The story is told in by Furtig, the protagonist who is one of these evolved cats. The novel is told in omniscient third-person, matter-of-fact, didactic, and almost documentarian.
When Furtig loses a competition that will put him in the sights of a mate (the People have staged competitive fights among males so that females of different clans can choose mates and therefore, prevent inbreeding), he leaves in self-disgrace to strike out and follow the same path his clan's ancestor made, which is to find leftover human technology and learn from it. Oh, and after hundreds of thousands to millions of years, the humans return...

Agreed, but for that purpose I'd recommend something more like Best in Show (reprinted as Furry!: The Best Anthropomorphic Fiction Ever!), which collects short stories from the early fanzine days and makes for a good broad overview of early furry fiction and furry tropes in general.
As far as my one choice, although I'm tempted to agree with The Jungle Book I'll go instead with Felix Salten's Bambi. It occupies an interesting area between full-on animal stories like White Fang and the more culture-infused works like Watership Down. You won't find out-and-out religion or folk tales, and the story is very much what the subtitle advertises -- "a life in the woods" -- but there's still a sense that these are more than animal characters, while remaining to the animal end of the animal-human spectrum. Remarkably profound and low on sentiment, and definitely recommended for any furry writers who are only familiar with the Disney version.

If you've only seen the Disney films of Bambi and/or Perri then you'll be surprised at the complexity and depth of the books themselves.
I'd honestly recommend most anthologies from the Big Three (SofaWolf, FurPlanet, Rabbit Valley). Though most are specifically themed, they give a great sampling of a variety of authors' works, giving the reader the opportunity to be exposed to as many publishable authors as possible without having to pay out the wazoo.
White Fang, Blitzcat, and The Wild Road did a lot for 'prepping' me for the fandom. All three felt like they paid a lot of respect to the mind of an animal without having to go full-anthro, as we in the fandom might define it.
As far as specifically in-fandom, I'd suggest Kyell Gold or MCA Hogarth. When I first picked up Gold's books, I had tried and failed a few times over to get through titles specifically released from fandom-based publishers (the only exception being Furtual Horizons, since I have a story in it :P). His were the fisrt I read cover-to-cover and was left asking for more. MCA Hogarth was most definitely the second, and I can't bring myself to disentangle from her Pelted Universe to this day. I haven't been this emotionally invested in a series since Animorphs back in middle school.
White Fang, Blitzcat, and The Wild Road did a lot for 'prepping' me for the fandom. All three felt like they paid a lot of respect to the mind of an animal without having to go full-anthro, as we in the fandom might define it.
As far as specifically in-fandom, I'd suggest Kyell Gold or MCA Hogarth. When I first picked up Gold's books, I had tried and failed a few times over to get through titles specifically released from fandom-based publishers (the only exception being Furtual Horizons, since I have a story in it :P). His were the fisrt I read cover-to-cover and was left asking for more. MCA Hogarth was most definitely the second, and I can't bring myself to disentangle from her Pelted Universe to this day. I haven't been this emotionally invested in a series since Animorphs back in middle school.

I really like Jan Needle's retelling of the story too. It's entitled The Wild Wood and retells the whole story but from the point of view of one of the ferrets (the bad guys in the Disney version, though more just lower class shadows in the Grahame novel.)
Needle gives us a proletarian viewpoint, and exposes the bind in which the poverty stricken find themselves in a class bounded society, which is what Grahame lived in and described though he only showed one side of the picture.

Just to add. If I absolutely had to pick one, it would probably be Wind in the Willows as well. Though Jungle Book is a close second.

"Watership Down" is good. XP It's one of my top five favorite books."
I was introduced to "Watership Down" the animated film as a little kid. Later, in community college, I found a copy on a stack of free books in the English Dept. I keep going back to it as a reader and as a writer, esp the Elahrairah cycles constantly told in the book! I even used the book as one on my annotation list during my MFA thesis term!

I will also mention White Fang which also uses interiority and spoken dialogue from the human characters. I also read the graphic novel version of Call of the Wild which was just as painful and gut-wrenching as the prose "White Fang". I am currently reading Dottie Smith's The One Hundred and One Dalmatians. It's one of the few Disney animations that I don't care for. The live-action was fine. The book is entertaining and Smith has her dogs speaking but in the voice of upper-middle-class Londoners. "Scruffy" read more in tune with dog physiology than "The One Hundred and One", which is a fanciful read. However, ideas of using a wet-nurse and breed specific issues are discussed and it is also an educational story.
I also FINALLY read Felix Salten's Bambi. It is a pastoral read of what life is like for wild animals, much like Adam's writing aesthetic.
I can't bring up Margery Sharp's The Rescuers enough. In it, the mice sometimes wear clothing, have meetings, and create furniture and housing. But Sharp's mice aren't like NIMH's rats. They are naturally highly intelligent and internationally organized. What strikes me is that Disney's "Rescuers" was one of my favorite films and I read the first book in Catholic school. Sharp's writing is deeply rich with detail, her mice carry in them the strengths and weaknesses we carry but they show more idealism, faith, and hope. Also, there is a series about these mice, especially about Miss Bianca and Bernard that I don't see mentioned on many reader sites! However, the Disney film takes its title from the first book but its story from the second in the series. For those looking for it, I suggest what I am doing: Get the omnibuses that collects three stories each. And, as an artist's dream, like mine, the books are illustrated by the incredible Garth Williams, same illustrator of the "Little House on the Prairie" books' fame.
Oh, and I am trying out Alan Dean Foster's "Spellsinger" series as well. Happy reading, everyone!


I will not try to spoil it, but I enjoyed both the society that he built, and the language barrier issues that the main character faces. I also admit that the whole, having a human as a fish out of water, appealed to me.
Another work is the Doona series, where the interactions between the races is vital to the success of both the series, and the read. (That and Anne McCaffrey and Jody Lynn Nye are always fun for me to read.)
But to pull back to everyone else, I do prefer blitzcat over Call of The Wild, but its by a very narrow margin as I think both books are fantastic. And I'm going to make a shout out to my favorite of Rudyard Kipling's works, Rikki-Tikki-Tavi. I've personally kept a version of that story with me almost my entire life, either in digital format on my phone, or in paperback resting in honor on my shelf. I love the story, the interaction of characters, and to this day I still clench with excitement in the climactic battles.

Wow, blitzcat. That's an old favorite of mine! I'm surprised to see it mentioned here. ^_^
-Fox

Anyway, it'd be hard for me to point to One True Book for furry writers/fans. Alan Dean Foster's Spellsinger books were influences on me, although I haven't read any in a long time. Honestly, I think a lot of early stuff from the fandom itself is worth revisiting, which makes it particularly irksome that Best in Show (also called Furry!) is so difficult to find. The Ursa Major Award anthology is mostly solid, although ironically I think some of its best stories weren't UMA winners. (Naomi Kritzer's "St. Ailbe's Hall" is pretty much the definitive take on the "when are uplifted animals people" story.)

Raptor Red is an awesome book. It really brings that time period and those animals to life. It also shows what can be done with a book about non-verbal characters -- a furry book that stretches the limits of what the actual animals would be capable of as little as possible, really only anthropomorphizing their thinking.
Books mentioned in this topic
Raptor Red (other topics)Raptor Red (other topics)
Furry!: The Best Anthropomorphic Fiction! (other topics)
Bambi: A Life in the Woods (other topics)
Waterways (other topics)
What's one book you think every furry writer should read, and why? (Fiction, nonfiction, whatever.)