What did Henry Williamson write?
Tarka the Otter
Henry William Williamson (1 December 1895 – 13 August 1977) was an English author who wrote novels concerned with wildlife, English social history and ruralism. He was awarded the Hawthornden Prize for literature in 1928 for his book Tarka the Otter.
Where did Henry Williamson live?
Brockley
Henry Williamson/Places lived
Where was Tarka the Otter born?
Tarka was born in ‘Owlery Holt’ (a ‘holt’ is the name given to dry holes amongst tangled tree roots in river banks that are an otter’s resting places) near Canal Bridge (actually an old aqueduct, very picturesque) on the river Torridge near Torrington (still a most magical place today).
Is Tarka the Otter a true story?
Tarka the Otter: His Joyful Water-Life and Death in the Country of the Two Rivers is a novel by Henry Williamson, first published in 1927 by G.P….Tarka the Otter.
First edition; woodcut after Hester Sainsbury | |
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Author | Henry Williamson |
Subject | European otter |
Genre | Natural history novel |
Publisher | G.P. Putnam’s Sons |
What age is Tarka the Otter for?
Book Information
ISBN: | 9780141354958 |
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Suitable for: | 11+ readers, 9+ readers |
Genres: | Animals |
Recommendations: | eBooks, Reviewed by Children |
Collections: | 50 classic books every child should read!, |
What does Tarka mean in Devon?
Wandering as Water
The novel describes the life of an otter, along with a detailed observation of its habitat in the country of the River Taw and River Torridge in North Devon (the “Two Rivers”); the name “Tarka” is said by Williamson to mean “Wandering as Water” (p. 10).
What is deadlock in Tarka the Otter?
Deadlock, the pied hound, Tarka’s nemesis. He finds Tarka as a cub and might have killed him if the huntsman had not called him off: Hunters allow cubs and pregnant females to live, to give more sport later.
Was Tarka the Otter female?
Tarka the Otter follows the birth, ‘joyful water-life’ and inevitable death of a male otter – Tarka, the Water Wanderer – in the ‘country of the two rivers’, namely the Rivers Taw and Torridge in North Devon which share a common estuary beyond Barnstaple, and the famous Braunton Burrows (extensive sand-dunes, until …
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-dJXQie-6Zg