Richard Adams, Watership Down author, dies aged 96
He was not on the list.
Richard Adams, the author of Watership Down,
has died aged 96.
A statement on the book’s official website
said: “Richard’s much-loved family announce with sadness that their dear
father, grandfather, and great-grandfather passed away peacefully at 10pm on
Christmas Eve.”
The novel, first published in 1972, became one
of the bestselling children’s books of all time, selling tens of millions of
copies.
Adams did not begin writing until 1966, when
he was 46 and working for the civil service. While on a car trip with his daughters,
he began telling them a story about a group of young rabbits escaping from
their doomed warren.
In an interview with the Guardian two years
ago, the author recalled: “I had been put on the spot and I started off: ‘Once
there were two rabbits called Hazel and Fiver.’ And I just took it on from
there.”
It was made into an animated film in 1978, and
the following year the film’s theme song Bright Eyes, sung by Art Garfunkel,
topped the UK charts for six weeks.
The book, which critics have credited with
redefining anthropomorphic fiction with its naturalistic depiction of the
rabbits’ trials and adventures, won Adams both the Carnegie medal and the
Guardian children’s prize.
The statement announcing his death quoted a
passage from the end of his best-known work. It read: “It seemed to Hazel that
he would not be needing his body any more, so he left it lying on the edge of
the ditch, but stopped for a moment to watch his rabbits and to try to get used
to the extraordinary feeling that strength and speed were flowing inexhaustibly
out of him into their sleek young bodies and healthy senses.
“‘You needn’t worry about them,’ said his
companion. ‘They’ll be alright – and thousands like them.”’
A spokesman for Oneworld publications, which
brought out a new edition of Watership Down with illustrations by Aldo Galli,
said: “Very saddened to hear that Richard Adams has passed. His books will be
cherished for years to come.”
The author, born on 9 May 1920 in Berkshire,
also wrote Shardik, The Girl in a Swing and The Plague Dogs. The latter
explores animal rights through the tale of two dogs that escape from a
laboratory.
Adams enrolled at Worcester College, Oxford,
in 1938. But when the second world war broke out, he enlisted in the Royal Army
Service Corps, serving in Palestine, Europe and the far east.
He returned to complete his studies, gaining a
degree in modern history, before finding work as a civil servant in the housing
and local government ministry in 1948.
He was also president of the Royal Society for
the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals from 1980–82. He was inducted into the
Royal Society of Literature in 1975.
A new animated TV mini-series of Watership
Down, co-produced by the BBC and Netflix, is due to air next year in four
one-hour parts.
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