Fox8 by George Saunders
American fiction
Source – Library
I wanted to throw a few contemporary writers in English into the mix, so I started with George Saunders I saw this at the Library, and I have always loved books with an animal narrator as a kid from Watership Down, wind in the Willows, for example. I often wonder why so few books are written for adults with Animals as the narrator. So when I saw this in the library, I had intended to read his Booker-winning Lincoln in the Bardo as I heard many people describe Saunders as a clever writer and a clever use of language, and I had wanted to read him for that reason.
At this time, Grate Leeder grew kwite sad. It was like he grew too sad to leed. And wud sit for hours staring into spase. It woslike Grate Leeder blamed himself that we had lost are Forest in which we had always lived since time in memorial. But we did not feel it was his fawlt. It hapened so fast, who cud have been grate enough to stop it? (I for sure did not know how to stop it. Once I snuk into the bak of a Truk and stole there hamer with my mouth. I know it is not gud to steel but I was so mad! But me steeling that hamer did not even slow them down. They must have had other hamers?!
Anexamplw of Fox 8 chatting to the Grate leader and how Saunders uses language.
So Fox 8 is narrated by Fox 8. As he says, he is a fox that has learned to speak Yuman from sitting outside a window as a mother reads to her kids. This a view of the Human world from that of a Fox and how they view us humans or, as he calls us, Yumans as a species. It is also a commentary on ecosystems and how we are ruining the foxes’ homes, and we see Fox 8 talk about his own home. This large wood had its heart cut in half as they develop a grand estate with a Mall or Mawl as he finds out when it is up from a Dog he chats to and tells him it is a Mawl as we see fox 8 wander through the Mall looking at how the Humans shop etc. he chats to the Grater leader around the events and the estate and the Human and its effects on the foxes.
Just then, a very Yung Yuman, a meer Todler, todled past with a smile of possibly thinking we are Dogs. There in her hand, we noted: some fud! It looked gud and smelled grate. It is a Bun! All of the suden, we desided to enter into a Fare Deel with her, whereby we wud share her Bun, by us taking it.
But then, quik as the wink, she is intaken into the Mawl, with one hand in the hand of her Mother and, in the other hand, our Bun!
And before we knew it, we too, lerd by her fud, had been intaken into FoxViewCommons, rite threw their Dore!
As he looks to see what the Mawl is all about I loved the use of langauge and his voice
This is a clever short story. It took me about an hour to read. I love how he gives Fox 8 a voice and uses language, and we know what happens through his eyes and the Yumans he sees in his world. I was primarily reminded of the great STUDIO ghibli film Pom Poko which used Magical Racoons instead of Foxes as through their eyes, we see how the Urban sprawl of Tokyo ripped apart their homes and natural habit, and this is the same type of narrative a world of Malls and estates replaces there familiar woods I said in the intro I wonder why we see so few animal narrators in adult fiction as we are seeing the natural world devastate around our treatment of the land and constant expansion and urbanisation;. Saunders has been very playful with the voice of Fox8. It hits the right key. You have him as a laid-back sort of drifter of a fox. He is a dreamer of a fox. This is a clever fable about the loss of habit told through their eyes. Have you read this or any other books by George Saunders?
Winstons score – B – A solid little story around the environment and our effect on it told from nature’s perspective















































