Overview
'Believe me, my young friend, there is nothing - absolutely nothing - half so much worth doing as simply messing about in boats.'
So says Rat to Mole, as he introduces him to the delights of the river
and his friends Toad, the spirit of rebellion, and Badger, the spirit of
England. But it is a world where the motor-car is about to wreck the
gipsy caravan, the revolutionaries in the Wild Wood are threatening the
social fabric, the god Pan is abroad, and the warm seductive whispers of
the south are drifting into the English lanes.
An international children's classic, The Wind in the Willows
grew from the author's letters to his young son, yet it is concerned
almost exclusively with adult themes: fear of radical changes in
political, social, and economic power. Mole's acceptance into the
conservative world of the River Bank, and Toad's wild attempts to escape
from it, are narrated in virtuoso language ranging from lively parody
to elaborate fin-de-siècle mysticism. A profoundly English
fiction with a world following, it is a book for adults adopted by
children, a timeless masterpiece, and a vital portrait of an age.
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