- Tales from Watership Down
Infobox Book
name = Tales from Watership Down
title_orig =
translator =
image_caption = First edition cover
author =Richard Adams
illustrator = John Lawrence
cover_artist =
country = UK
language = English
series =
subject =
genre = FantasyChildren's literature
publisher = Hutchinson (UK)
pub_date = 1996
english_pub_date =
media_type = Print (Hardback andpaperback )
pages = 198pp (first edition, hardback)
isbn = ISBN 0091801664 (first edition, hardback)
oclc =
preceded_by = The Day Gone By
followed_by ="Tales from Watership Down" is a collection of nineteen short stories by
Richard Adams , published in 1996 as a follow-up to Adams's highly successful 1972 novel aboutrabbit s, "Watership Down ". It consists of a number of short stories of rabbitmythology , followed by several chapters featuring many of the characters introduced in the earlier book. [IBList |type=book|id=13436|name=Tales from Watership Down] citeweb |url=http://dir.salon.com/story/books/review/1996/11/21/sneakpeeks/ |title=Tales from Watership Down |accessdate=2008-03-15 |author=Sally Eckhoff |date=1996-11-26 |publisher=Salon.com] Like its predecessor, "Tales from Watership Down" features a Lapine glossary and epigraphs at the beginning of each chapter.Overview
"Tales from Watership Down" is in three parts: the first consists of five traditional tales of
El-ahrairah and two more modern rabbit stories, the second contains four episodes recounting events that befell El-ahrairah and Rabscuttle on their return from visiting theBlack Rabbit of Inlé , and the third contains eight chapters dealing with the Watership warren in the months following the events of the original book.cite web |url=http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9505EEDE113DF932A35751C1A960958260 |title=Books in Brief: Fiction |date=1996-12-01 |publisher=The New York Times |author=J. D. Biersdorfer ]Four new characters were introduced: Flyairth, a doe who threatens to undermine the stability of Watership Down; Sandwort, a disrespectful young buck who eventually changes his ways; Coltsfoot, a depressed buck whom Fiver befriends; and Stonecrop, an escaped hutch rabbit. Although most of the characters remain static from "Watership Down",
Hyzenthlay , a doe, rises to the position of Co-Chief Rabbit with her mate, Hazel.Literary significance and reception
"Tales from Watership Down" was generally rather poorly received by fans of "Watership Down", many of whom had expected a longer and more conventional
sequel . A reviewer forThe New York Times wrote that while it was a "lighthearted companion piece" to "Watership Down", it was "a little disjointed as a stand-alone volume." However, it was praised by another reviewer atSalon.com , who wrote that "The pure, unfamiliar feelings evoked in "The Story of the Three Cows" and in the gory "The Hole in the Sky" — just two of the stories here — persist for quite a while after you've finished reading them."The collection is now out of print in Britain, although it is still sold in some other countries such as the
United States .fact|date=March 2008Footnotes
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