
L'Express (La Sentinelle LTD)
News and Magazines & Newspapers
App
L’Express, the leading daily newspaper in Mauritius, delivers the latest news to your device. ...

Birds and People
Book
There are 10,500 species of bird worldwide and wherever they occur people marvel at their glorious...
Future North: The Changing Arctic Landscapes
Janike Kampevold Larsen and Peter Hemmersam
Book
What is the future for northern landscapes? How will they look? What will it be like to live there?...

Lions in the Balance: Man-Eaters,Manes and Men with Guns
Book
From flat-topped acacia trees to great migrations of wildebeest across an edgeless expanse of grass,...

Rage of the Righteous
Games
App
Welcome to Rage of the Righteous, an exciting action-combat MMO game! Assume the role of a new...

Profit Over People: Neoliberalism & Global Order
Book
Why is the Atlantic slowly filling with crude petroleum, threatening a millions-of-years-old...
Politics social issues

Ross (3284 KP) rated The Constant Rabbit in Books
Aug 20, 2020
In The Constant Rabbit, Fforde has taken the topic of racism and put it in a different setting. Due to an unexplained event, a number of animals were anthropomorphised, including a few rabbits, foxes, bears and elephants. True to their nature, that small population of rabbits has exploded and they now represent a large proportion of the population. Britain being what it is, there is a lot of ill-feeling toward these rabbits and this has made it's way into politics and societal changes. The government themselves are the UK Anti Rabbit Party, and there are a great number of restrictions on the rabbits' freedom of movement.
The book serves as a great analogy for historic racism and xenophobia that still remains in the UK and the western world as a whole.
The story itself only reveals itself gradually, it takes a long time to be set up and generally just unfolds. There is no real underlying plot from the off, it is the unfolding of a scenario.
To that end, I felt this book was a little more about the idea, and the effort put in to fleshing that out, and the story itself has suffered slightly. There are long sections of exposition throughout the book, and at times it does get a little boring.
Far from Fforde at his best, it is still a great funny book and a wonderful thought experiment and demonstration of the ludicrousness of xenophobia.

Red Famine: Stalin’s War on Ukraine
Book
The momentous new book from the Pulitzer Prize-winning author of Gulag and Iron Curtain. In...
History Politics

A Rift in the Earth: Art, Memory, and the Fight for a Vietnam War Memorial
Book
A Distinguished and Bestselling Historian and Vietnam Vet Revisits the Culture War that Raged around...
History Art Architecture
Sarah (7800 KP) Aug 20, 2020
Kevin Phillipson (10072 KP) Aug 20, 2020