Richard Adams
- In full:
- Richard George Adams
- Died:
- December 24, 2016 (aged 96)
- Also Known As:
- Richard George Adams
Richard Adams (born May 9, 1920, Wash Common, Berkshire [now West Berkshire], England—died December 24, 2016) was an English author known for reinvigorating the genre of anthropomorphic fiction, most notably with the beloved children’s book Watership Down (1972; film 1978), a novel that presents a naturalistic tale of the travails of a group of wild European rabbits seeking a new home.
Adams was raised in a rural community outside Newbury, Berkshire, where he led an isolated childhood mostly occupied by exploring his bucolic surroundings. He enrolled at Worcester College, Oxford, in 1938, but the advent of World War II the next year necessitated the postponement of his studies. In 1940 he enlisted in the Royal Army Service Corps, joining an airborne company. Following the war, Adams completed a bachelor’s degree in modern history at Oxford (1948). He found work with the civil service, eventually advancing to assistant secretary in the precursor to the Department of the Environment in 1968. (He cowrote the version of the Clean Air Act passed that year.)
Because he was largely immersed in work and raising a family (he married in 1949), Adams did not begin writing until 1966. While on a car trip with his daughters, he began telling them a story about a warren of rabbits; the girls urged him to put the story to paper. Adams penned the tale over the next two years, consulting R.M. Lockley’s natural history study The Private Life of the Rabbit (1964) to ensure the accurate depiction of his rabbit protagonists, who leave their oppressive warren after it is threatened by a housing development. What emerged was a sui generis work of fiction: unlike much anthropomorphic literature, the animal characters in Watership Down, though able to talk, behave as they would in the wild—fighting, copulating, and defecating.
The work was rejected by several publishing houses before a small independent publisher accepted it. The novel received rave reviews in Britain and was honoured with the 1972 Carnegie Medal in Literature and the 1972 Guardian Children’s Fiction Prize. The book became a runaway best seller in the United States when it was published there in 1974.
The profits allowed Adams to begin writing full-time that year. Shardik (1974) relates the formation of a religion centred on a giant bear; the protagonists are human. The Plague Dogs (1977; film 1982) explores issues of animal rights through the tale of two dogs that escape from a research facility—possibly carrying the bubonic plague. The novels The Girl in a Swing (1980; film 1988) and Maia (1984) drew attention for their graphic depictions of sexuality. Adams took a different approach to anthropomorphism with Traveller (1988), told from the perspective of Robert E. Lee’s horse. He returned to his intrepid rabbits with Tales from Watership Down in 1996. Daniel (2006) concerns a former slave who becomes an abolitionist.
Adams wrote two works of nonfiction with Max Hooper, Nature Through the Seasons (1975) and Nature Day and Night (1978), and another with Lockley, Voyage Through the Antarctic (1982). His autobiography, The Day Gone By, was published in 1990.
Adams was president of the Royal Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals (1980–82). He was inducted into the Royal Society of Literature in 1975.