“Badger hates Society, and invitations, and dinner, and all that sort of thing.” 🦡📚
I love this quote — I think many, many bookish people can identify with Badger and his aversion to socialising. I definitely fall into this camp! 😅
The Wind in the Willows was our choice for May for #classiclitbookclub and I loved it. I thought I’d read it when I was a child, but I must have only read parts of it. I remembered Toad in the motor car and the riverbank, but I think there are many TV adaptations and spin-off stories too that I may be remembering. 🚗🌿
I loved the cosiness of the animals’ homes, the camaraderie as they share a meal, and the stoic way they all look out for one another when something goes wrong. The book is full of nature, and the descriptions are so powerful I felt as though I was living on the riverbank amongst Mole, Ratty, and Badger. 🍃✨
The edition I was reading was gorgeous too, with some beautiful illustrations that brought the story even more to life. 🎨📖 I loved it, and I’m so glad we read it. 💛
About the BookThe Wind in the Willows is a timeless pastoral adventure that celebrates the enduring power of friendship and the quiet beauty of the English countryside. The story follows the gentle Mole as he ventures out from his underground home to join the loyal Ratty, the wise Badger, and the irrepressible, motorcar-obsessed Mr. Toad. Balancing whimsical escapades—like the chaotic reclamation of Toad Hall—with lyrical reflections on nature, Kenneth Grahame’s classic captures a nostalgic world where "messing about in boats" is the highest calling and home is always waiting at the end of the road.
About Kenneth
Kenneth Grahame (1859–1932) was a Scottish writer whose life was defined by a deep-seated love for nature and a successful, if unlikely, career in finance. Born in Edinburgh and orphaned at a young age, he was raised by relatives in the English countryside near the River Thames—a setting that would later become the idyllic backdrop for his stories.
Despite his literary talent, Grahame spent three decades working at the Bank of England, eventually rising to the prestigious position of Secretary. He wrote in his spare time, originally creating the adventures of Mole, Ratty, and Toad as bedtime stories and letters for his young son, Alastair. Although The Wind in the Willows(1908) is now a cornerstone of children’s literature, Grahame chose to live a quiet, reclusive life in Berkshire following its publication.











