A classic by the author of Watership Down. Touching account of the travels and travails of two escaped laboratory dogs, written from the dogs' perspective and understanding.
Snitter and Rowf are fugitives from the horrors of the animal research center. Their escape from man's cruelty is only the beginning of their chilling experiences as they flee to the isolation...and terror...of the wilderness.
A story about a couple of dogs that escape from a animal testing facility. These poor creatures are then alone in the wild for weeks without food and an sense on how to survive without man to lead them. A story that makes you realise how in-human humans can be. And how love, kindness and compasion isnt something that makes us weak. I loved this book and think any animal lover should read it!
Well, I have rather mixed feelings about this book. I always enjoy a good dog book - and this one certainly had points that were good, but I was a bit bogged down by the style. It was overly wordy, had few enjoyable characters and had no women to speak of. The premise was quite interesting and I would have liked it more had it been executed in a different way. Really, the ending was the entire book's saving grace. It reminded me a lot of Diane Jessup's _The Dog Who Spoke With The Gods_. It most certainly shared the theme of depicting animal cruelty - though they both went about it in a different way.
Snitter's madness was an interesting aspect too.
Excellent story! Through giving the power of speech to 2 dogs and a fox, the author tells a compelling tale of escape from an animal experimental farm.
After reading the wonderful reviews, I truly had high hopes for this book. All animal-related books pique my interest and I do believe that I gave this one enough time before I decided to stop reading it. I did not have a difficult time understanding the plot, yet the dialect that is used for the main characters is just too difficult to comprehend. I found myself skipping over certain paragraphs which elaborately described certain geographical locations that caused me to lose my interest. I do think that Richard Adams is a gifted author but this book was just too painful for me to continue reading.
And we think some humans have it tough. As a lover of dogs, their plight was no less than that of humans which were being abused, abandoned and sought out like criminals when they are only innocent. Great Read.