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Encyclopedia > The Plague Dogs

The Plague Dogs is the third novel of Richard Adams, author of Watership Down. It was first published in 1977.

This book tells of the escape of two dogs, Rowf and Snitter, from a government research station in the Lake District in England, where they had been horribly mistreated. They live on their own with help from a fox, or "tod" in his Geordie dialect. After they attack some sheep on the fells, they are described as ferocious man-eating monsters by a journalist called Digby Driver. A great dog hunt follows.


Like its predecessor Watership Down, this novel has an animated movie based on it.


  Results from FactBites:
 
The Plague Dogs - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (488 words)
The Plague Dogs is the third novel of Richard Adams, author of Watership Down.
A great dog hunt follows which is intensified with the fear that the dogs could be carriers of a dangerous bioweapon like bubonic plague.
Unlike the book, where the dogs find sanctuary from the hunters and they are cleared of being carriers; the film takes a harder tone with an ending where the dogs are driven out to open water where they likely drown.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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