08-02-2001, 11:16 PM | #1 |
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Watership Down
Anybody read Watership Down, I thought that was a great book, one of my favorites!
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08-02-2001, 11:24 PM | #2 |
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Re: Watership Down
Welcome to the board .
I had to read it for school last summer. I thought the beginning was a bit slow, but by the end I couldn't put it down. Of course, endless worksheets, essays, and homework assignments kind of kill the fun of a book :/ . |
08-03-2001, 01:11 AM | #3 |
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Welcome, welcome!
Oh yes, I have. Loved it.
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08-03-2001, 03:20 AM | #4 |
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Re: Welcome, welcome!
I thought it was interesting the whole way through, it's one of my favorite books!
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08-08-2001, 10:06 PM | #5 |
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Re: Watership Down
I liked it. I also liked the Redwall series.
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08-10-2001, 01:56 PM | #6 |
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Re: Watership Down
Cool, I love the Redwall series!
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08-12-2001, 11:30 AM | #7 |
The man
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I love Watership Down, and find Redwall books slow, drag, and boring (yes I know I just said the same thing three times). Go figure
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08-19-2001, 04:04 PM | #8 |
Sapling
Join Date: Aug 2001
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I adored Watership Down...has anyone read the sequel, "Tales from Watership Down"? I liked it, but it seemed much more of a little kid book than the original.
As for the Redwall series, I used to read those books constantly, but then they got a little old...kind of the same story again and again... |
08-20-2001, 07:12 PM | #9 |
Sapling
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Location: Boston, Massachusetts U.S.A.
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Yes, I have read Tales from Watership Down, we were discussing it earlier in the thread!
I guess I haven't grown out of the Redwall Series because I'm still a kid!
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11-16-2001, 12:04 AM | #10 |
Elven Warrior
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I love Watership Down! I think Adams is just brilliant! It's very difficult to write about what an animal might think or say without making them too human and Adams does it just right. Yes they talk, but they still think like what I imagine rabbits would think like! I love the part where the one rabbit that's really capable of abstract though (Blackberry, I think) is trying to explain to Hazel about how the plank floats on the water when they are trying to escape the dog loose in the wood. Hazel never does understand it, he just trusts Blackberry to know what he's talking about. Even when Fiver and Pipkin are in the middle of the stream floating on the plank, most of the rabbits still can't quite grasp what's going on, it's like magic to them. And Magic time again when they use the trick to escape Gen. Woundwort on the skiff. How I would have loved to see the expression on his face! He couldn't have been more suprised if they had sprouted wings and flown away! What a wonderful book! i've read it over and over!
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11-17-2001, 12:50 AM | #11 |
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I've heard of Watership Down, but I've never read it. I love the Redwall series, though. The plots get repetitive, but there are always subplots and/or characters that get me involved so much I couldn't put it down.
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11-20-2001, 02:54 PM | #12 |
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Hey cool!
I love bothe Redwall AND Watership down. I also liked Tailes from watership down. |
11-20-2001, 06:04 PM | #13 |
Elven Warrior
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I haven't read Watership Down, but I have read most of the Redwall series. Yummy.
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11-20-2001, 06:31 PM | #14 |
Elven Warrior
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I love Redwall. I have heard of Watership Down, but not that much. I only know about it because in some of the Redwall books on the cover it says "In Tradition Of Watership Down".
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12-29-2001, 08:51 PM | #15 |
Enting
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Watership Down is one of my favorite books.
I have read Tales From Watership Down, but didn't like it as much as Watership Down. I've read all but one of the Redwall books, and like them a lot. However, I like them less now than when I first read them.
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12-30-2001, 08:58 PM | #16 |
Sapling
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Location: Sydney, Australia
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I adore Watership Down!! I read it three times in a row when I was ten and developed and obsession with wild rabbits. Since then I've read it at least three more times (although not for several years) and watched and rewatched the 1978 animated film version. (Voices by John Hurt, Richard Briers, Michael Graham Cox - Boromir in the BBC radio LotR -, Ralph Richardson, Denholm Elliot and Nigel Hawthorne - with the bonus of nicely animanted, non-cutsey bunnies. A wonderful adaptation, and often genuinely frightening).
I love the first line in the book - "the primroses were over" - and the last line - "the primroses were beginning to bloom". Amazing that Adams was able to write such an exciting, dramatic and moving epic novel about a bunch of rabbits. I've always liked the fact that parts of WD are quite dark - it's one of the most atmospheric of books.
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01-05-2002, 06:57 PM | #17 |
Elven Warrior
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Lumina,
I loved the annimated version too! It was very faithfull to the book and the annimation is beautiful. The openning scene, with the butterfly on the stalk of wheat is simply gorgeous!
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01-08-2002, 01:29 AM | #18 |
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Yes!! I love this forum!!
Watership Down has been one of my favorites for years . . . my copy is all read to pieces (much like my former copy of LotR!). I've never wanted to read Redwall, though. The idea of rodents acting like humans (wearing clothes? wielding swords?) just totally turns me off. It's so demeaning (to the rodents) and just generally annoying.
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01-31-2002, 09:33 PM | #19 |
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I loved redwall and watership. Jaques is a great writer.
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01-31-2002, 09:39 PM | #20 |
Elf Lord
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Watership Down was amazing, though I've only read it once. I found out about it from the back of my Redwall books.
I used to be VERY into Redwall, but I've moved on in my authors.
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