My list of Xenofiction (animal protagonist/world) books and media I've either read, or been meaning to read!
(Mostly books, but may mention film adaptations, webcomics, visual novels and narrative driven games as well)
I may update with reviews as I finish them.
Feel free to add your own or discuss here as well!
WIP!
Top 3
1. Varjak Paw by SF Said - 2 book series - Highly Recommend - Primary Species: Cat ๐
Currently my favorite recommendation, especially for any Warrior Cats fans who are fatigued with the series and are looking to branch out.
Action adventure about a house cat who learns to hunt and fight from his dream ancestor after he leaves his home to live as a stray. He forms friendships with a band of cats and even a few dogs. Conflict in the first book revolves around a mysterious disappearance of cats, while the second book is about the encroaching danger of a violent gang of cats.
The plot isn't the most unique thing in the world, but the ink illustration and visual design of some of the pages is so, so nice. It's a short series, so not much time lost if it's not your thing. (The author mentioned there would be a third book in like 2006, but no news on that.)
I actually started with the second book, The Outlaw Varjak Paw (Varjak Paw had been checked out and I didn't realize it was a series at the time). Personally I think the two stories are stand alone enough you don't necessarily need the context of the other book. Personally I liked The Outlaw more, but I enjoyed both very much.
2. Watership Down by Richard Adams - Standalone - Highly Recommend - Primary Species: Rabbit ๐
A true classic of the genre. I have a feeling many are already familiar with it, it is the story of a warren of rabbits destroyed by urban development, and the survivors having to travel to find a new home.
The folkloric angle is very well done and Fiver's prophetic dreams feel appropriately mysterious and scary.
The only knock I have against it is the very male-leaning cast (Bigwig has a pretty cringe line about "needing more does") but despite that it's well worth a read.
If you have an interest in film/animation, do not skip watching the 1978 film adaptation. There are some scenes omitted, altered, or added but it is fairly faithful, and definitely faithful to the message.
There are also 2018 and 1999 tv series adaptations. I have not seen the 1999 one. The 2018 changed the gender of a few side characters but is fairly faithful as well.
3. Guardians of Ga'Hoole by Katyrn Lasky - Multiple Arcs, 16 books, - Highly Recommend (Due for a re-read) - Primary species: Owl ๐ฆ
Basically everything actually good about Warrior Cats but better.
In broad strokes this series is about a kingdom of owls who must defeat the 'Pure Ones', a rising group of supremacists. The protagonist starts as Soren, a barn owl who is kidnapped by a brainwashing cult/work camp, and then later Corrin, Soren's nephew with Evil Parents.
There is a lot of neat lore and interesting ways the owls supplement their battle tactics (metal claws, carrying embers). My memory is a bit fuzzy since it's been many years since I read them. I remember Twilight and Gylfie being my favorites of the main band and Ezlyrb, Otulissa, Dustytuft, and Lutta (latter two are very sad) being some of my other favorites.
The 2010 film adaptation Legends of the Guardians: Owls of Ga'Hoole condenses the story considerably, so I'd recommend reading the books first if you care about spoilers. But I do still recommend the movie because the animation is stellar.
(The rest will be sorted by Primary species)
Mice, Rodents, 'Woodland Critters'
Poppy by Avi - Part of the Tales of Dimwood Series - Soft Recommend (Due for a re-read) - Primary Species: Mouse ๐ญ -
Poppy was my favorite book as a child, and one of my earliest exposure to xenofiction. (Perhaps one of the first books that killed a character off so early on too haha)
It tells the story of a widowed mouse, struggling to provide for her family under the threat of a dangerous owl.
The Amazing Maurice and his Educated Rodents by Terry Pratchett - Standalone; (Set in the fantasy realm of Discworld but not considered part of that series) - Highly Recommended - Primary Species: Cat, Rats, Humans ๐ญ ๐
Originally picked this up because its a self contained story in the Discworld setting and they were making it into a movie. (I have yet to see the movie) My favorite book I read in 2022 by a long shot, fits my interests the best, lots of humor and very cute. Maurice is a bastard con artist of a cat, stringing the rats into working with him for his pied piper scthick, just very fun clash of different personalities and a very Call of Cathulu kind of vibe. It *is* about also about rats though so lots of gross causal mentions about them peeing and pooping everywhere (they use the term 'widdling'). The animal violence is about on par with like Watership Down or Warrior Cats violence but generally skews more comedic.
Just as charming, funny, and whimsical as Terry Prachett's other books, reading this was a highlight of my summer.
I could see the interaction with human children being a turn off for some people but they didn't bother me. Feels a little more All Dogs Go to Heaven/ Don Bluth Movie type inclusion - Relevant to the plot but Maurice is the star here.
The Tale of Desperaux - Standalone Novel - Soft Recommend - Primary Species: Mouse ๐ญ -
Due for a re-read if I want to properly review it. This story felt a mix of small world mouse (re: living in a human castle and using a needle as a sword) and fairytale. I have vague memories of it being illustrated, but it may have been just chapter headers.
Cats
The Wildings by Nilanjana Roy - Two book series - Recommend - Primary Species: Cat ๐
A kitten born with an unusually strong telepathy power known as 'Sending' causes a ruckus as has little control over what she sends, and her projected thoughts are LOUD AND ANNOYING. The cats recruit her as their new 'Sender', and she is instrumental in taking down a dangerous foe- the leader of a gang of cannibalistic cats.
The way the powers work, setting the story in India, and the communication with non-cat animals are what set it apart the most. If cross animal communications annoys you it might not be your thing but it's less one random exception to the rule and more of a language they establish and use appropriately. The different mannerisms of the species is a highlight, really entertaining.
Overall I say it's very well written, the jumping around different perspectives may be a bit jarring at first but I think evened out as the book progresses. (Though my bias is that I wish we spent just a little more time in Beraal's head) It throws a lot of characters at you right off the bat, but then rounds back around to giving time with each of them.
Mara is very funny but sometimes I do think they tried too hard to have her come across as 'cute and bubbly' which I found less endearing than her vapid, bratty moments but I mileage may vary on that.
I think the confrontation actually does wrap up in a really clever way that pulls in elements built up in other chapters seamlessly.
I'd say it's more mature and complex than the Tyrgrine Cat. Despite the powers and other animal languages The cats feel very much Like Cats, and that grounds it for me. they do actually kill off certain characters. The way the Beraal casually describes having had a litter with x cat or having to cull kittens in the past is pretty unique, almost aromantic- there's no warrior cats monogamy going on here lol.
Sequel: The Hundred names of Darkness
Apparently I only imagined very hard that I already wrote a review of this. Either that or Discord doesn't want it to see the light of day lol.
Overall, I think it was a fairly cohesive way to continue the story. Mara is older now, and more situated into her role as the Sender. She must take a big step- finally physically leaving her home. She begins meeting with the Senders of other cat colonies and negotiating with them.
Their territory is shrinking due to urban development, so finding a new place to live is the main plot, while Southpaw being injured and taken in by humans (going missing) is a secondary plot.
The cast of supporting characters gets a bit zanier, and the humor is a little hit and miss for me. Hatch, a cheel who fears flying, Doginder, a dog who wants to be a guard dog, and Tomas Mor, a peacock who lives on the golf course. Hatch is probably the weakest of the three to me, one note, moody teen says 'whateva' to blow others off a lot.
The title drop Thousand Names of Darkness is a story Beraal tells Mara with more of a folkloric angle and is a highlight.
There is also a battle against an overpopulation of rats, and main villain is pretty comedic.
This particular excerpt took me out -
-
-
"But I am nobody to object," Chamcha said hurriedly, "I am only your humble, obedient servant, Moonch, whatever you say is fine by me. If you tell me to move your burrow to the top of the koel's tree I will oblige. If you tell me to move your burrow to the clubhouse, it shall be done forthwith! It shall all be as you say, Mooch, please forgive your humble servant if he has given offense."
"Slinky, bite him," said Moonch lazily.
-
-
I have a slight preference for the first book but some scenes (like this one lol) I liked better in this one.
The Tygrine Cat - Three Book Series (I have only read book 1 so far) - Soft Recommend - Primary Species: Cat ๐ -
Action adventure where the Tygrine cat, Mati, is the only living heir to his clan. His mother sacrifices herself to save him from the assassin Mithos, but he starts to pick up on Mati's trail eventually...
I enjoyed it quite a bit, a nice short popcorn read that didn't overstay it's welcome. (only like 250 pages) Nothing in it will really surprise you, very good vs evil - but it was funny and charming with some nice lore and spooky moments. I'd peg it more as a solid Children's Book than Warrior Cats/Watership Down, Nowhere near as dark or gratuitous, most of the violence has poetic or mystical quality to it- in my animator minds eye Don Bluth would have a field day with the imagery (It's not Kiddie Kiddie though Mithos is in fact a killer and still had some great villainous bastard moments)
The plot takes a breakneck pace after the fluff and lore at the start (personally would have liked just a little more time exploring the Cressida Cat dynamics before Thing Happen but it definitely doesn't waste your time)
The gender ratio isn't terrible, none of the female characters really feel disposable, the majority of the Folkloric characters were mollies, and Mati's connection to his mother is a very important throughline (though I do kind of wish Ria and Trillion had more scenes)
some details I liked
- catisms; we actually get slow blinks, caterwauling, tail chasing etc just silly little guys
- the cats' culture is not treated with the solemn gravitas of Warrior Cats in the narrative; they are allowed to be petty and superstitious and overly concerned with pomp and circumstance 10/10
- the cats view on house pets is that they are the ones who 'own' the humans lol
- homophobia?? there is a passing mention of a stigma against older toms who never took on a mate (respect this being said out loud) I love you gay uncle Sparrow
- the cats comparative ages are pretty clear the whole time like Mati is just solidly a Little Guy he's itty bitty shaking chihuahua and I love him
- Mati is a VERY cute protagonist lol he considers himself a 'master thief' and is a huge nerd some bullies were making fun of his fur color and he's like "uhm actually I'm an agouti it's normal"
- took the same 'I like this specific cat breed so they're the Special one' as Varjak Paw which is just funny to me
-Its just funny in general like even Big bad scary assassin reaction to peeking into the the vet office and seeing a dog in a cone: "Only humans could concoct such peculiar torture"
Warrior Cats by Erin Hunter - 54+ books, ongoing - Cautious Recommendation - Primary Species: Cat ๐
A giant of the genre, popular for a reason, but flawed in many ways as well. Wild cats who live in the forest and go through various soap opera levels of drama, battling, etc. Its very nostalgic, and simplistic enough world building it leaves a lot of wiggle room for fans to run and do their own thing with it (Warrior Cats RP is extremely popular). The huge web of characters that accurate over the series have lead to a bad amount of (hopefully accidental) incest, questionable age-gaps, mischaracterization, underutilized characters. The series has also often been criticized for ableism, misogyny, and racism (specifically a mishandling of The Tribe of Rushing Water, who are something of a Native American stand in).
Disclaimer: I've personally only read the first four arcs, plus a few of the side books/mangas/fid guides. They're lower priority for me to continue with, but buzz about the most recent arcs has caught some of my interest.
Starting with the first series and/or manga adaptation of the first arc would be my recommendation to a new reader. I'd also suggest Mapleshade's Vengeance and Crookedstar's Promise for a taste of what the side/prequel stories are like. Above all else though, check out the Warrior Cats fan animation scene on YouTube along side your reading!
- Large Carnivores -
Seekers by Erin Hunter - 12 book series, two arcs and a manga - Cautious Recommendation - Primary Species: Bear ๐ป -
I read this back in middle/high school alongside Warrior Cats. I remember enjoying it but I haven't revisited it since I finished it and can't speak how gracefully the Native American elements were handled. I don't remember anything egregious but I haven't put out feelers for what folks think.
I remember it being it being pretty harrowing and sad, (all of the main characters are orphaned cubs iirc) but the dynamics and optimism of the characters play off of each other in a fun way. Not a ton going on in way of plot, just one long and hard journey. I feel like it leaned more into realistic hazards animals might face and environmentalism in lieu of Warrior Cats' political drama, soap opera type romance and betrayals. One particular plot important character has some mystical elements but overall they are just regular bears.
Runt by Marion Dane Bauer - Standalone novel - Soft Recommend - Primary Species: Wolf ๐บ
A story about the runt of the pack who is disowned by his father, and wants to earn his respect and a true pack name. You'll have more to sink your teeth in with Wolves of Beyond, but for a quick little read it's not bad.
Many years since I read this. One of my earliest Xenofiction books besides Poppy by Avi.
-
Furry/Anthro - (Some things skirt the line but basically ones that have a more humanoid structure and aren't doing anything fun small/secret word or remains of an apocalypse stuff re: example to-scale mice using a needle as a sword Tale of Desperaux, Small Saga VS is based in historical 1920's they're just furries for fun Lackadaisy)
None atm
Reading List
Partial Exposure (Haven't Read full series or have seen other adaptations
Redwall ๐ญ ๐ ๐ฆซ ๐ฆ ๐ฟ๏ธ
Rats of NIMH ๐ญ
Basil of Baker Street ๐ญ
Animals of Farthing Woods ๐ญ ๐ฆ ๐ ?
The Wolves of Beyond ๐บ
Survivors ๐ถ
Plague Dogs ๐ถ
Ratha's Creature ๐ฆ
Geronimo Stiltskin ๐ญ ๐ง
Happy Happy Clover (ใฏใดใฏใดใฏใญใผใใผ, Hapi Hapi Kurลbฤ) ๐ ๐ญ ๐ฟ๏ธ
Tales from Dimwood Forest (Poppy Series) ๐ญ
No Exposure (Have not read beyond the blurb)
Set Ablaze ๐ฆ
Mistmantle Series ๐ฟ๏ธ
Silverwing ๐ฆ
Foxcraft ๐ฆ
Tailchaser's Song ๐
Wings of Fire ๐
Wildlands ๐ฆ
Webcomics
Finished
Jumalanpelko by Sysi Hiltunen - Highly Recommend - Primary Species: Cat ๐ -
Heed content warnings! This story is a tragedy. You throw religious trauma into the mix and know you're in for a doozy.
It's one of those stories where the writing is on the wall that things are going to go so so bad but finding out the specifics of how and why keeps you turning the page. The simplistic style of the characters and use of color is really nice. Not much I can explain without spoilers. It's all feels so simple at first but layers into this horrific revelation.
Forgotten by cheesecakewitch - Recommend! - Primary Species: Cat, Mouse ๐ -
A murder mystery starring Mittens, a house cat who's learned to speak mouse.
Very cute style, charming characters, and lore. There's blood, murder, and death, but has content warnings. Nothing too severe- compared to Warrior Cats it's about on par.
-
Ongoing
What Lurks Beneath ๐
Cat Island ๐
Golden Shrike ๐ฆ
Africa ๐ฆ
I Hope So ๐ฆ
Blades of Furry ๐ฆ ๐ง
Indefinite Hiatus / Dropped
Lackadaisy* ๐ ๐ง (Comic is on hiatus, animation is in production)
Pull Down Heaven ๐ ๐
Honorable mention (Skirting the line a bit to be considered Xenofiction, but I enjoy enough to mention them)
What's Micheal? by Makoto Kobayashi ๐
Alterity Nuzlocke Comic by Mewitti (Indefinite Hiatus) ๐ ๐ฆ
The Last Unicorn ๐ฆ ๐ช
Film and TV
Pom Poko - ๐ฆ -
Hello, please pl ease watch my favorite Ghibli movie, that is all thank you.
The story of racoon dogs / tanuki struggling to adapt and survive in the face of urban development.
Really underrated gem as far as Ghibli movies go IMO. The folklore and yokai stories are fantastically told and a true visual spectacle. It's a sad story but the playfulness throughout keeps it from being too much of a downer. The grim optimism at the end just really sticks with me.
It is more violent than family films like Totoro and Ponyo, but not quite as graphic as Princess Mononoke or Howl's Moving Castle. Named characters do die. There is a sad scene where there are piles of roadkill being loaded into a truck.
Heathcliff and the Catillac Cats ๐ - Pure silly cartoon antics. Absolutely absorbed into my personality at an early age.
Spirit: Stallion of the Cimmaron - (I am curious about the books but they are out of print and expensive) ๐ด -
Absolutely beautiful movie.
Ringing Bell ๐ \ ๐บ -
A lamb's mother is killed by wolves and he learns to fight to take revenge.
A surprisingly dark early Sanrio film. Short, but interesting watch. There's violence and death but nothing I'd consider overly graphic. I really enjoy the tragic fable like story.
Arashi no Yoru ni (ใใใใฎใใใซ, lit. One Stormy Night) - (I did actually stumble across one of the books in a used bookstore, but the film adaptation is probably your best bet.) ๐ \ ๐บ -
I think I discovered this the same year as Ringing Bell so amusing different take on a wolf and sheep dynamic. The kind of gay?? story of a two unlikely friends.
Hamtaro ๐น -
Guys I don't think this is proper hamster husbandry
Very slice of life and fluffy adventures of pet hamsters that have their own club they meet up with while their humans go to school.
Just another nostalgic series for me, though I never watched all the anime so I am curious about it. I remember the Gameboy games being pretty entertaining and having delightful pixel art.
Visual Novel, Interactive Fiction, Games - (I may move these to the video game thread)
Stars in the Trash ๐ \ ๐ถ - Point and click about strays!
Bug Fables ๐ชฒ - PLEASE IF PPL HAVE ANY Bug People type worlds I Would LIKE TO Know About THEM ๐