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A Horse Is a Horse


Article # : 13648 

Section : BOOK WORLD
Issue Date : 8 / 1988  3,775 Words
Author : James J. Thompson, Jr
James J. Thompson, Jr., is the book review editor for The New Oxford Review. He has written three books: Tried as by Fire: Southern Baptists and the Religious Controversies of the 1920s (Mercer University Press, 1982); Christian Classics Revisited (Ignatius Press, 1983); and Fleeing the Whore of Babylon: A Modern Conversion Story (Christian Classics, Inc., 1986). He has coedited (with George M. Curtis III) The Southern Essays of Richard M. Weaver (Liberty Press, 1987).

       TRAVELLER
       Richard Adams
       New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 1988
       Cloth. 248 pp., $18.95
       
       Someone once suggested that the perfect book title would be Lincoln's Doctor's Dog. Obvious reason: Lincoln and the Civil War continue to spellbind Americans; medicine remains a perenially popular topic; and, of course, everyone dotes on dogs. Richard Adams, the English novelist who won renown with the infamous bunny book, Watership Down, has an equally hot ticket: General Lee's horse. Adams goes one better than the apocryphal medico's canine, for in Traveller the General's faithful mount talks. Not to the General himself, mind you, but to cats, dogs, goats, and other horses. Something of a snob, though, Traveller disdains conversation with artillery horses and mules. Whether he talks with bunnies is problematic, for none appear in the novel.
       
        Most everyone has fallen victim to one of those garrulous World War II veterans who haunts bars, cadging drinks and glazing the patrons' eyes with tales of how he licked Hitler or singlehandedly smashed Hirohito's maniacal hordes. Although Traveller is a teetotaler, and his reminiscing takes place in a stable, the effect is similar at times. The captive audience is a cat, Tom the Nipper, one of the Lee family's felines. Poor Tom. Every time he ventures into the stable to snap up a tasty morsel of mouse, Traveller collars him and forces the hapless tabby to audit his yarns.
       
        Perhaps Tom was not so reluctant a listener after all, for he appears to have lent a hand to the ... (1997 of 21777 Characters)
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