Watership Down is my favorite novel and has been since age 8. The idea of anyone not liking it is always so difficult for me to process!
After I finished Watership Down for the first time (the aforementioned age 8) I desperately wanted MORE OF THIS and tried reading Shardik. I just couldn't do it. It started out like it was about a bear, so I was happy, then after the first chapter turned into a bunch of boring humans blah, blah, blahing about politics. (Remember, I was 8.)
I had similar experience with Shardik when I was 14 - AFTER reading Plague Dogs first, and expecting something else along the veins of Watership Down and Plague Dogs. My mom liked Shardik, though, so I've been thinking I should maybe give it another try now that I'm older and more used to dealing with different kind of texts (bit like I could comprehend Silmarillion better when I re-read it bit older). However, I haven't seen Shardik in libraries for aeons, and haven't been THAT determined for a re-read I would have ordered it from elsewhere... Well, maybe this year.
Ha, I remember my mom described latter part of Shardik "Stephen King-like" back then, but I never got that far in reading it. Now that article gives hint it was actually other way round ;)
The last rabbity novel I think I read was Frost Dancers, a recommendation from avon_deer. I bought two other novels by the author and never got around to them.
Watership Down was a massively important part of my childhood, I must have read my copy 100s of times, and I've never heard of this other book! I will definitely have to read that one, and interested to hear your opinion on it too.
Comments 12
After I finished Watership Down for the first time (the aforementioned age 8) I desperately wanted MORE OF THIS and tried reading Shardik. I just couldn't do it. It started out like it was about a bear, so I was happy, then after the first chapter turned into a bunch of boring humans blah, blah, blahing about politics. (Remember, I was 8.)
Reply
Reply
Reply
Reply
Reply
Reply
Reply
Reply
Reply
Reply
Leave a comment