PIPKIN MAKES A FRIEND While searching for food at Nuthanger Farm, the rabbits meet Kehaar the seagull. Kehaar meets the vicious claws of Tabatha the cat, but is luckily saved by the intervention of Hazel. During the skirmish, Kehaar injures his wing and, along with Hannah the mouse, Pipkin suggests that they join them - the start of what is to be a lasting friendship.
This book features in the following series: Alltime Classics, Watership Down .
There are 24 pages in this book. This is a picture book. A picture book uses pictures and text to tell the story. The number of words varies from zero ('wordless') to around 1k over 32 pages. Picture books are typically aimed at young readers (age 3-6) but can also be aimed at older children (7+). This book was published 1999 by Random House Children's Publishers UK .
DIANE REDMOND is the author of more than 45 books for young readers - including Here We Go! For the Corgi Yearling list - as well as a number of plays and TV scripts. She has three children. Author lives- Cambridge
This book contains the following stories:
Watership Down
This is a story about a group of rabbits in search of a home. Fiver has a gift - he can sense danger. Unable to convince the Chief Rabbit, Fiver leaves the warren with a group of rabbits in search of a safer home. Along the way they are tempted to join another warren - where food is plentiful - but on discovering the catch (food = snares) they leave in search of a better place. At Watership Down they establish their own warren but realise they need some girl rabbits for the colony to survive. A nearby warren has females, but a battle ensues with the established bucks. Eventually all is sorted and the two sides build a third warren between their camps and fill it with rabbits from both warrens.
Pipkin Makes a Friend