Kenneth Grahame is the author of the beloved children's classic, The Wind in the Willows. This charming story, filled with animal friends and gentle adventures, has delighted readers for generations.
Der Wind in Den Weiden

Der Wind in Den Weiden
Synopsis
The Wind in the Willows (German: Der Wind in den Weiden), first published by Kenneth Grahame in 1908, is one of the best-loved works of English children's literature. It began as bedtime stories the author told his young son and grew into a gentle pastoral fantasy about a group of anthropomorphic animals living along an English riverbank.
Mole, tired of spring cleaning, abandons his burrow and is introduced by the good-natured Water Rat to the pleasures of boating and riverside life. Together they meet the reclusive but kindly Badger, who lives deep in the Wild Wood, and Toad of Toad Hall, whose reckless enthusiasms — first for horse-drawn caravans, then motor cars — repeatedly land him in trouble. When Toad's obsessions finally cost him his freedom and his ancestral home is seized by the sly weasels and stoats of the Wild Wood, his friends band together to win it back.
Alternating between cosy scenes of hospitality and friendship and passages of genuine adventure and melancholy, the novel is celebrated for its evocative descriptions of the English countryside and its warm portrayal of loyalty between unlikely friends.
Vibe
Genres
Characters
The MoleProtagonist
A timid but curious home-loving animal who leaves his burrow to explore riverbank life.
Ratty (Water Rat)Protagonist
A boating enthusiast and poet who befriends Mole and introduces him to river life.
Mr. ToadSupporting
The wealthy, reckless owner of Toad Hall, prone to wild obsessions that get him into trouble.
Mother BadgerSupporting
A gruff but wise recluse living in the Wild Wood who acts as the group's moral anchor.
Edition
Der Wind in Den WeidenHardcover, Marc
216 pages
Arena Verlag GmbHISBN: 97834010468395 editions available
































