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Shardik
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Shardik
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Shardik
Ebook801 pages13 hours

Shardik

Rating: 3.5 out of 5 stars

3.5/5

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About this ebook

More information to be announced soon on this forthcoming title from Penguin USA.
LanguageEnglish
PublisherPenguin Group
Release dateOct 30, 2001
ISBN9781468302028
Unavailable
Shardik
Author

Richard Adams

Richard Adams (1920–2016) was educated at Bradfield College and Worcester College, Oxford. He served in the Second World War and in 1948 joined the civil service. In the mid-1960s he completed his first novel, Watership Down, for which he struggled for several years to find a publisher. It was eventually awarded both the Carnegie Medal and the Guardian Award for children’s fiction for 1972. He would go on to publish several more books, including Shardik, Tales from Watership Down, Maia, The Plague Dogs, and The Girl in a Swing.

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Reviews for Shardik

Rating: 3.5759878097264437 out of 5 stars
3.5/5

329 ratings11 reviews

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  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    This is a powerful but grim novel with a rather bittersweet ending. The protagonist (not really the hero, if there is a hero, it is a different character) discovers the bear Shardik which his people believe is the return of the god who led them to greatness in the legendary past. This inspires them to go out and conquer a neighboring higher civilization, but eventually their brief empire falls apart (due to the efforts of the hero aforementioned). The bear and his discoverer go through a transforming spiritual experience in a strange region, and then the bear (more or less accidentally) dies struggling against evil child-enslavers, and so his myth is reimagined as defender of children. Overall, I prefer the other book set in this region, Maia, which is not so grim and more straightforward, though perhaps less serious-minded.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Since Watership Down has been one of my all time favourite books since I first read it years ago, it was in a sense inevitable that I would at some point read Shardik, also by Richard Adams. Shardik is a mythical tale of a great bear who comes to symbolise hope, and potential for a new golden age for the Ortelgans. This story follows the path of Shardik, but also of Kelderek whose life becomes intrinsically linked with that of the bear.I loved this book for its detail, which helps the reader become absorbed in the histories and coming fates of the nations involved. The characterisation is for the most part well handled, but I felt that like Tolkien, there was a certain amount of descriptive work which could have been done without, and was merely reiterating character development which had already been covered. There were genuinely poignant moments, which I will not spoil for the reader, but overall I found the book a bit of a slog. More suited to the Lord of the Rings fan than a die-hard lover of Watership Down.
  • Rating: 2 out of 5 stars
    2/5
    Felt like I had to finish it, but, frankly, I'd lost all interest long before the end. Watership Down and The Plague Dogs are much better.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    Rather like the Lord of the Rings, thi narrative is full of descriptive passages that don't advance the plot. Kreldik the hunter finds the essence of God in the bear Shardik, and sets his life to understanding his message. The tale meanders a bit, but is ultimately about finding contentment in life. As an aside, it touches on the issues of slavery and children's rights.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Although I read Watership Down many years ago, I am sure I remember the tone of it well. It was playful and endearing as befits a tale made up for children. Shardik is so unlike Watership Down it is difficult to believe it was written by the same author.As I was reading it I was trying to remember what other work of literature it reminded me of. At first I thought it was the Lord of the Rings and, of course, Shardik shares some aspects of LOTR especially considering Adams is Oxford educated. But that analogy didn't seem quite right so then I wondered if it was the Wizard of Oz particularly when Kelderek was living in Bekla as the priest king. He was certainly as much a charlatan in that role as the Wizard was in his. But that book was definitely meant for children and Shardik is anything but a children's book. It wasn't until I read the dedication page again which includes a quotation (in Greek) from the Odyssey that it hit me. Kelderek is on a quest like Odysseus from the moment he encounters Shardik. There's even an enchanted isle with priestesses that figures prominently.Some of the details, especially toward the end of the book, were almost too graphic to read. Adams certainly knew how to personify evil. And I felt so sorry for the poor bear! However, the secret message intended for Kelderek from Shardik and the message for all of the readers is certainly a valuable one. I'm very glad I finally took the time to read it.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Perhaps Adams was rather tired of people saying "I loved your book about the Bunnies". I think he was, for then he wrote this book about how people view a brush with nature. A whole religion is built up by people whose contact with this one particular animal. It's a good novel visiting the worshipper's relation to his God, the public's reaction to meeting really motivated followers, and some of the acts empowered by the bear. It is also good about how people react with each other on any important topic, and a very good construction of an imagined world. The follow-up book "Maia" is set in the same place, and is more conventional fantasy.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    As a child, I loved Watership Down, and so read Shardik when I was probably much too young for it. I was interested in reading it again as an adult, having loved Watership Down so much earlier in the year.The concept is that God has come to earth as a giant bear / sent a giant bear as his messenger, to a simple tribe of island dwellers in the imaginary Beklan Empire. The book toys with the ambiguity of whether the bear is genuinely of God, or whether the naive and simple islanders are over-reacting to coincidence, but by the end of the 500 pages coincidence has piled on coincidence to the point where I would find it hard to write any plausible thesis where the bear is not controlled by a divine power, or at least an omnipotent author.It falls into a lot of the cliches one would imagine a book written by a white Englishman in the 70s about a fantasy empire would. There are beautiful dusky priestesses, slavery, mystic rituals, etc etc. It is also unbearably slow, after the sort of page turning YA fiction I've been whizzing through recently. The only bit I remembered clearly from reading it as a child is the section where the hero is captured by the slave trader. It was one of the first and most striking books I'd read where the hero is completely subjected to someone Evil, and it's still powerful (if, with more critical eyes, slightly cliched slave-misery-lit)But it is, in the end, a mostly-engaging fairy tale / allegory. The morals are a little heavy handed - people mess up when they pretend that their own desires for power are what God really wants, there is always forgiveness and a chance of redemption for those that seek it, what goes around comes around and what you inflict on others you will suffer yourself, and 'there isn't to be a deserted or unhappy child in the world. In the end, that's the world's only security: children are the future, you see. If there were no unhappy children then the future would be secure.' But they are good morals.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    Man against nature - in this case an almost mythical bear. Adams' _Watership Down_ is far superior and I would imagine that is why this book is out of print. His _Plague Dogs_ is also better.
  • Rating: 2 out of 5 stars
    2/5
    Tried twice 30 years apart. No.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    Adams is best-known for Watership Down, an excellent novel about rabbits. Two years after that book’s massive success, he published a… straight-up fantasy novel. It wasn’t published as such, of course. If anything, Penguin tried hard to pretend Adams had pretty much invented fantasy with their marketing for the novel. But Shardik is set in an invented land, at a technology level not far above Bronze Age, and is about a giant bear considered to be a god, or an avatar of a god, by a race of people. So it’s basically a fantasy novel. It just happens to be better written than is typical for genre fiction. The title refers to an ancient god of the Ortelgans, personified as a giant bear, who was kept on an island inhabited by priestesses. But the empire fell, the capital Bekla was conquered, and a new empire rose in its place. Shardik died and did not reappear. Generations later, a giant bear appears on the island the Ortelgans, now simple hunter folk, settled on after the fall of their empire. And they see it as the second coming of their god, and use it to take back Bekla and re-establish their empire. But they are not the people they once were. The novel mostly concerns Kelderek, the hunter who discovers Shardik, becomes his priest, and then the priest-king of Bekla. But it’s an empire doomed to failure, and Shardik escapes after an attempt on its life. Kelderek goes after him, and the two travel about the country – there’s a handy map, of course – both sinking further and further from what they were as the book progresses. Kelderek encounters enemies he made while priest-king, and evil people he helped create. It’s all a bit grim, and Adams has this weird trick of referencing culture that would be known to a well-educated Brit in the 1970s, which does sort of kill the immersion. You do not, after all, except to see a mention of Shakespeare in a secondary-world fantasy novel. I suspect I wanted to like Shardik more than I did. It felt like it didn’t try hard enough to be a fantasy, even though the world-building was generally good. The quality of the prose, however, was a definite bonus.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    This is a fantasy set in a pre-industrial, vaguely middle-eastern or South American world. A small, out-of-the-way cult is energised when their object of veneration, a gigantic bear, becomes real. The cult leaders see the coming of the bear as a vehicle to bring the world closer to God. Warlords and politicians co-opt the worship and fear of the bear to conquer the region. Over time political and military expediency dilute the original cult message and antagonise the conquered lands. An uprising results in the bear escaping and the man who originally found and captured the creature, once a lowly hunter and now the king of the empire, sets out at first to recapture the beast. Slowly he realises how corrupt his empire and his religion have become and he starts seeking redemption. A reconnection with the cult priestesses and an encounter with a child slave trader (child slavery is used here to represent the depravity of the empire) leads him to salvation.Strong descriptive writing and a powerful evocation of nature shore up this book. Action set pieces are well done. The weakest element of the book is the depiction of the key characters who never seem real to me.