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Raising Hare
Raising Hare: A Memoir | Chloe Dalton
27 posts | 18 read | 21 to read
A moving and fascinating meditation on freedom, trust, loss, and our relationship with the natural world, explored through the story of one womans unlikely friendship with a wild hare. Imagine you could hold a baby hare and bottle-feed it. Imagine that it lived under your roof and lolloped around your bedroom at night, drumming on the duvet cover when it wanted your attention. Imagine that, over two years later, it still ran in from the fields when you called it and slept in your house for hours on end and gave birth to leverets in your study. For political advisor and speechwriter Chloe Dalton, who spent lockdown deep in the English countryside, far away from her usual busy London life, this became her unexpected reality. In February 2021, Dalton stumbles upon a newborn harea leveretthat had been chased by a dog. Fearing for its life, she brings it home, only to discover how impossible it is to rear a wild hare, most of whom perish in captivity from either shock or starvation. Through trial and error, she learns to feed and care for the leveret with every intention of returning it to the wilderness. Instead, it becomes her constant companion, wandering the fields and woods at night and returning to Daltons house by day. Though Dalton feared that the hare would be preyed upon by foxes, stoats, feral cats, raptors, and even people, she never tried to restrict it to the house. Each time the hare leaves, Chloe knows she may never see it again. Yet she also understands that to confine it would be its own kind of death. Raising Hare chronicles their journey together, while also taking a deep dive into the lives and nature of hares, and the way they have been viewed historically in art, literature, and folklore. We witness first-hand the joy at this extraordinary relationship between human and animal, which serves as a reminder that the best things, and most beautiful experiences, arise when we least expect them. A beautiful book that makes you think profoundly about how we so often tune out the natural world around us. Chloe Dalton is a tender, curious, wise, mind-expanding guide, connecting readers with the wild we humans once knew so well. I will be recommending this to everyone. Matt Haig, author of The Midnight Library
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Leniverse
Raising Hare: A Memoir | Chloe Dalton
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I love it when a book gives me really interesting information about something it had never occurred to me to think about. I am now officially a fan of hares. I really didn't think that a book about a woman's lockdown project of looking after a hare would be all that interesting, but it really was.

#WomensPrizeNF #WomensPrize
#14books14weeks book 1

#

tpixie Stacked! 1w
LeeRHarry Glad you enjoyed it. 😊 1w
42 likes3 stack adds2 comments
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Leniverse
Raising Hare: A Memoir | Chloe Dalton
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Indeed!

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rabbitprincess
Raising Hare: A Memoir | Chloe Dalton
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This was really lovely 🥰

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CBee
Raising Hare: A Memoir | Chloe Dalton
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Oh, how I loved this. It‘s described as a part memoir, part natural history, part manifesto (loosely quoted from the interview between the narrator Louise Brealey and the author - a bonus if you listen to the audio). So much beauty packed into a short book, and I wished for more. A favorite of the year thus far, 100%.

CBee If you‘ve watched Sherlock, Louise Brealey plays Molly 😊 1mo
LeeRHarry Loved this one too. 😊 1mo
CBee @LeeRHarry I‘ll be thinking about it for a while, I‘m sure! 1mo
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rabbitprincess Ooh Louise Brealey narrates? Might have to read this again in audio! 1mo
CBee @rabbitprincess yes!! Her narration is the icing on the cake! So lovely. 1mo
ShelleyBooksie I've just started this one and I love her descriptions of the hare. 1mo
CBee @ShelleyBooksie yes! I could picture the hare perfectly. 1mo
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Jas16
Raising Hare: A Memoir | Chloe Dalton
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A nonfiction account of a woman who finds an injured leveret and manages to save it. She ensures it remains wild and does not become a pet but forges enough of a bond with it so that she is able to observe and examine it as it grows and also ruminate on its effect on her like. This book was a gift to read at a time when I seem unable to settle into most books.

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monalyisha
Raising Hare: A Memoir | Chloe Dalton
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The variety encapsulated by my reading month makes me happy. It‘s a pretty accurate snapshot of my literary life as a whole.

StoryGraph tells me I‘m 14 books ahead of my reading goal. It‘s possible I set the bar too low but it still gives me a flush of pleasure!

monalyisha Don‘t mind my personal reading tracker: #AWreads2025 1mo
vivastory I'm curious: what format did you you read the John Green in? 1mo
monalyisha @vivastory Audiobook, which I wouldn‘t change! 1mo
ravenlee I started setting my StoryGraph goals ridiculously low because it was giving me anxiety. 🤣 Now I can feel confident all year because I hit my goals in January. 1mo
willaful I also enjoyed the audiobook of The Anthropocene Reviewed. 1mo
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rabbitprincess
Raising Hare: A Memoir | Chloe Dalton
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I would like these endpapers as wallpaper, please and thank you 😍

TheBookHippie Oh yes! 2mo
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CBee
Raising Hare: A Memoir | Chloe Dalton
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I‘m enjoying this book SO very much, and have already learned quite a bit. That being said, here is my #weirdwordwednesday choice: agouti. I‘m referring to the coloration, but an agouti is also a type of wild rodent (where the name for the coloration came from). Here‘s a Wiki: https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Agouti_(coloration)
#weirdwords

CatLass007 I love your weird words! 2mo
TheSpineView Great word! 🤩 2mo
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BookmarkTavern How fun! 2mo
Deblovestoread ❤️🐰❤️ 2mo
Deblovestoread Thanks for the tag! 2mo
dabbe Another fun one to say as well! 🤩 2mo
CBee @CatLass007 thank you! It was this one or “ossification” as it relates to birds. Can you tell I love animals? 😊 2mo
peanutnine Very cool! 2mo
CatLass007 Animals are some of my favorite people. 2mo
46 likes10 comments
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monalyisha
Raising Hare: A Memoir | Chloe Dalton
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Dalton, a political adviser forced into a rare period of inactivity by the pandemic, finds an injured leveret on the path behind her country home and nurses it back to health. Though she never closes the door to the fields & meadows beyond her threshold, the hare chooses to spend pieces of each day with her. Dalton‘s cottage is viewed as a safe haven — so safe that the hare eventually opts to give birth to her wild babies in the author‘s bedroom.

monalyisha 1/2: Of course, I found this nature memoir touching and timely. We desperately need to slow down, quiet the chaos inside our brains and in our days, rewild our lands and our selves, and reevaluate our priorities. My own identity as a bun-mom for 12 years obviously heightened my connection to the text (putting Dalton‘s staunch insistence upon marking the differences between rabbits & hares aside). 2mo
monalyisha 2/2: Though the conclusion isn‘t objectively devastating, reading the author‘s anticipatory reflections about their time together ending still totally undid me. The writing is solid but I‘d expect something tighter from a Women‘s Prize for Nonfiction winner (which this isn‘t…yet). Adjectives are almost *too* plentiful & Dalton‘s sentences trend long. It made me miss my own little cottontail fiercely. My gratitude for her gifts is renewed daily. 2mo
LeeRHarry The conclusion definitely had me teary. 2mo
AnnCrystal 🐇💝. 2mo
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monalyisha
Raising Hare: A Memoir | Chloe Dalton
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“The atmosphere of calm suffused by her throughout the house lingers even when she is gone. I hope always to be able to summon it at will, along with the memory of the light and trusting touch of her paws in the palm of my hand, and her steady…gaze. And when one day I can no longer see her, I will watch the hares in the field knowing that her being is woven into theirs, and I only have to look up at night to see her symbol etched in the stars.”

AmyG 💔🩶 2mo
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Lindy
Raising Hare: A Memoir | Chloe Dalton
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This amazing tale about the bond between a British woman and a wild hare is currently shortlisted for the Women‘s Prize for Nonfiction. I loved it.

squirrelbrain Gorgeous endpapers! I missed those as I listened on audio. 3mo
Lindy @squirrelbrain There‘s a different sketch on the opening page of each chapter; it‘s a lovely print edition. (Canongate) 3mo
Hooked_on_books I loved this, too! 3mo
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Lindy @Hooked_on_books High five, Holly! 3mo
BooksandCoffee4Me So beautiful! 2mo
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Lindy
Raising Hare: A Memoir | Chloe Dalton
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I talk about the tagged book and 6 others in my latest booktube video, as well as International Trans Day of Visibility and doing touristy stuff in Victoria BC. #LGBTQ+

https://youtu.be/wLpbL6QsA_k?si=2llFEuO2vFFcfT6H

Chelsea.Poole I just checked out Stag Dance on audio. I‘ll have to watch to see what you thought of it. 3mo
Lindy @Chelsea.Poole I hope you enjoy it as much as I did. I didn‘t give any spoilers in the video. 3mo
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Chelsea.Poole
Raising Hare: A Memoir | Chloe Dalton
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I loved Dalton‘s memoir of her time with a hare. I loved her respect for the wild creature and her earnest determination to both accommodate the hare in her home but keep herself at a distance in order to build trust. I loved the relationship between wild creature and human—something that‘s been written about often in memoirs at the present (Me and Alfie, etc). I‘m not sure this will win the Women‘s Prize (NF), but I wouldn‘t be sad if it did.

ChaoticMissAdventures I think it is going to be between this and the Heart. Both are so well loved. 3mo
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Tamra
Raising Hare: A Memoir | Chloe Dalton
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Memoirs are a hard sell for me, but this one worked because the focus here is on hares. Beautiful nature writing!

But, is it prize worthy? 🤷🏼‍♀️

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jenniferw88
Raising Hare: A Memoir | Chloe Dalton
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squirrelbrain
Raising Hare: A Memoir | Chloe Dalton
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Book 10 of the #wpnf25 longlist.

In this heart-warming book the author finds an abandoned leveret at the start of COVID lockdown. I appreciated that she was unsure initially whether to even take it in or not and it never felt like she was ‘playing God‘ throughout the book.

I particularly liked how she was able to watch the hare at such close quarters that she turned accepted/assumed knowledge about hares upside down.

On my shortlist for sure!

TrishB Great review 👍🏻 3mo
ChaoticMissAdventures I need to know before I pick it up.... does the hare die? The one she is raising? 3mo
squirrelbrain @ChaoticMissAdventures - not the one she is raising, we never find out what happens to that one. There are other deaths though - some out in the fields (to be expected) but also another leveret. 3mo
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ChaoticMissAdventures @squirrelbrain Thank you!! I think I can handle that. :) 3mo
squirrelbrain It *is* sad @ChaoticMissAdventures but the author is philosophical about it and it feels like the circle of life more than anything too traumatic. 3mo
charl08 I have ordered this one at the library, but despite loving H is for Hawk, not one I would normally pick up. 3mo
squirrelbrain I haven‘t read H is for Hawk yet @charl08 so can‘t compare - it‘s been on my shelf for years! 😳 3mo
youneverarrived Great review! Do you think it would be a good one for audio? (Nearly finished Ootlin and thinking of my next listen) 3mo
squirrelbrain Yes, definitely @youneverarrived - I did audio and thought it worked really well. 3mo
youneverarrived Good to know, thanks! 🩷 3mo
65 likes3 stack adds10 comments
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LMJenkins
Raising Hare: A Memoir | Chloe Dalton
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This looks really good. 🐇

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fredthemoose
Raising Hare: A Memoir | Chloe Dalton
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⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️ Delightful memoir of a woman who came across a struggling, abandoned juvenile hare and went on to raise it after realizing it couldn‘t be returned to its mother. I really enjoyed both her experiences and the documentation of the hare‘s behaviors, and the interweaving with biological and historical information. The end dragged a bit with the inclusion of some ecological advocacy, but overall a great #WPNF25 pick!

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Hooked_on_books
Raising Hare: A Memoir | Chloe Dalton
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This is the most marvelous book! Dalton details the relationship she developed with a tiny baby hare (leveret) during COVID lockdown and how things moved forward from there. If you have even a speck of tenderness for animals, I‘m pretty sure you‘ll love this as much as I did. #WPNF25

Leftcoastzen Sounds interesting. 4mo
Soubhiville I‘m sure I‘d love it. 😊 4mo
Hooked_on_books @Soubhiville I think you will! I can‘t wait to share it with my mom. 4mo
squirrelbrain Looking forward to this! I should get to it before the shortlist as it‘s due to me on 16th March. 🤞 4mo
AnneCecilie I loved this one too 4mo
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AnneCecilie
Raising Hare: A Memoir | Chloe Dalton
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I‘d been eyeing this before it made it to the #wpnf25 Longlist, I‘m so happy it was on it

This was so cozy and heartwarming, and I hoped it would never end

At the beginning of the pandemic, Dalton finds a young leveret in her garden. She can‘t see the mom so she decides to take care of it

A book that shows how little we know about nature and wild animals. A book that shows that it‘s possible for people to change & do better for other creatures

quietlycuriouskate I recently received it as a birthday gift. ❤️ 4mo
squirrelbrain Great review! I‘ve had it reserved on BorrowBox audio for some time, but it‘s not due until 31st March. I may try to find a copy elsewhere instead. 4mo
ChaoticMissAdventures Glad to hear! I am so nervous it is going to leave me in tears! 4mo
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rachaich This looks so beautiful. 4mo
Chelsea.Poole Sounds lovely indeed. Thanks for your review. Looking forward to this one! 4mo
Hooked_on_books Nice! It‘s not out here yet, but I was able to get it on NetGalley, so I‘m excited to dive in. 🐇 4mo
Anna40 This is on my to read list since I listened to an interview with the author but I‘m waiting for a paperback-too expensive at the moment! ☹️ 4mo
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ChaoticMissAdventures
Raising Hare: A Memoir | Chloe Dalton
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Looking for spoilers!!

Have you read this? Does the hare die?

I can't find the answer in my normal places. This is getting a lot of talk in predictions for the Women's Prize Nonfiction and I just cannot handle a dead bunny at the moment so would love if someone could use the spoiler button below and spoil it for me.
Thanks so much!!

CBee I don‘t blame you. I can‘t stand when animals die in books. Turns me right off! 5mo
CBee Okay, so I think this isn‘t one you want to read. I looked it up with this search term “Raising Hare does the hare die” and a StoryGraph thing popped up with some reviews. Under triggers for animal death 😢 5mo
monalyisha I‘m also invested in the answer to this! I could maybe handle it, regardless. Maybe. But having lost our bun in July, we‘re still very sensitive. Otherwise, very interested! 5mo
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ChaoticMissAdventures @CBee in some reviews it was saying there was like a general overview of so hard animal deaths but I could not tell if it was about the actual hare she adopts. I just can't get attached to a particular animal the main story is about and then..... 5mo
ChaoticMissAdventures @monalyisha I am so sorry to hear!! They can be so sweet and such a big part of our family! Hope your family is healing ❤️ 5mo
CBee @ChaoticMissAdventures yep, exactly! They become like a main character and it‘s just SO devastating once you‘re attached 😢 (edited) 5mo
monalyisha Thanks, @ChaoticMissAdventures! We‘re doing okay, all things considered. We adopted our first dog this Fall. He‘s helping. There are still hard moments, of course. I don‘t think I fully realized how *perfectly* she fit my lifestyle and sensibilities until she was no longer here. She didn‘t need me to be anything other than who I naturally am, and that was such a comfort and a relief. Her soft little ‘tude is keenly missed. 5mo
rabbitprincess @CBee Oop I might have to remove this book from my to-read list as well 😢 thanks for looking into it! 5mo
monalyisha @ChaoticMissAdventures Finding this post again, after having read the book. I can answer your question now! The hare she raises doesn‘t die, though one of its babies does. At the end of the book, the hare is 3 (which is considered a long life for a wild prey animal). She also finds other bodies taken down by farm equipment & predators in nearby fields. They were sadnesses I could handle, though I recognize that everyone has a different threshold. 2mo
ChaoticMissAdventures @monalyisha oh thank you for coming back to this! This definitely sounds like something I can handle. I will have to add it to the list! I am so glad so many people are loving the book. 2mo
monalyisha @ChaoticMissAdventures Whenever I feel conflicted about my response to a book, I seek out other reviews that match my own. I found several middle-of-the-road write-ups that say it felt like there was something missing. Most express that they wish the author had shared more of herself or that she included too much info-dumping. I‘m not sure that‘s why I felt the same way they did (like there was a certain spark missing) but I did. Still very good! 2mo
37 likes11 comments
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Mitch
Raising Hare: A Memoir | Chloe Dalton
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November was a good month for me - lots of ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️