Raising Hare

A Memoir

304 pages

English language

Published 2025 by Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group.

ISBN:
978-0-593-70184-3
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A moving and fascinating meditation on freedom, trust, loss, and our relationship with the natural world, explored through the story of one woman’s 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 hare—a leveret—that had been chased by a dog. Fearing for its life, she brings it …

3 editions

Raising Hare

I'm a complete sucker for stories of inter-species companionship, especially with a single woman in a rural setting, so I was always going to enjoy this (even if the side of me more inclined to a hermeneutics of suspicion was screaming 'WITH THE EVIL TORIES' every time Dalton mentioned her job. It was interesting that she resisted a lot of the sentimental anthropomorphism that usually comes with this territory, encapsulated by not imposing a name on the hare. The otherness of the wild animal is maintained throughout, despite the love, care and gratitude she had for them shining through every page. It's the usual mix of memoir, cultural history and popular science that is so successful in creative nonfiction, and albeit clunky in parts (unsurprisingly since it's a debut). I'm emotionally invested enough not to look up any interviews etc as I don't want to know what happens beyond the …

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Subjects

  • Zoology