Follow TV Tropes

Following

Context Literature / TheFoxAndTheHound

Go To

1[[quoteright:237:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/foxnhound_2954.JPG]]
2
3A novel written by Daniel P. Mannix and published in 1967. It has a Creator/{{Disney}} [[WesternAnimation/TheFoxAndTheHound movie]] very loosely based on it, which is [[AdaptationDisplacement much better known than the book]].
4
5The plot stars a human-raised red fox named Tod. After Tod causes the death of a hunter's prize hound, Chief, the [[AnimalNemesis hunter pursues Tod in a fit of vengeance]], aided by his aging half-bloodhound Copper. Of ten chapters, Copper gets four as the viewpoint character and Tod six. The novel takes great pains to show both characters' distinctly non-human thought processes - in particular, scent rules their world far more than sight, especially in Copper's case.
6
7----
8!!This novel provides examples of the following tropes:
9
10* AnimalNemesis: The Master and Copper determinedly hunt down Tod for many years due to Tod killing Chief, one of the Master's younger hounds.
11* AnimalTesting: An extremely benign example. The human who adopts Tod is also, at the time, raising a terrier puppy. He runs a simple experiment on them by rigging up a plate of food to deliver a shock if touched. [[DogsAreDumb The terrier takes several shocks to get the idea, and completely forgets the plate's unpleasantness in a few months.]] Tod gets shocked ''once'' and ''never goes near it again''.
12* AuthorTract: The final chapters rail against urbanization.
13* BearsAreBadNews: While Chief protects the hunter from a bear, Copper cowers in fear.
14* BearTrap: Tod becomes fascinated with bear traps when they first appear and he makes a game out of causing them to snap shut without getting himself caught in them. This becomes more difficult as they become more elaborate, and one time he gets caught in one so badly that when he manages to escape by a miracle, he holes up for days and never goes near them again. His first mate also meets her demise through one.
15* TheBerserker: The catch dogs, who in their frenzy will more often go after the hounds than whatever quarry the Master is after. Tod's first mate is also driven temporarily insane by her pregnancy.
16* BizarreAlienSenses:
17** From the reader's perspective, Tod and Copper's amazing senses of smell can come across as this.
18** Copper's eyesight is so bad that he seems to consider clear colour vision to be a Bizarre Human Sense.
19* BloodLust: The two viewpoint characters are carnivores. Do the math. While Copper is well-trained enough to not go after animals he isn't sicced on, that doesn't mean he isn't ''really tempted'' sometimes. Tod hunts for a living, and during a bad drought actually gets most of his water from the blood of his prey.
20* BlueAndOrangeMorality: The animal characters don't have human morals, priorities, or cognition. This can make them come off as evil to some readers, but to others makes them come off as merely alien in their thinking.
21* BornLucky: Some of the times Tod survives some grisly fate are due to sheer luck rather than foxy cunning.
22** After escaping the bear trap, Tod collapses from exhaustion and nearly gets caught by Copper and the Master, but they pass him by completely. Even Tod can't believe in his luck.
23** He somehow never gets rabies despite several violent run-ins with infected foxes.
24** He only doesn't eat a lard ball containing strychnine because he gets distracted by two mice scurrying by. When he does eat strychnine, it's already passed through many animals, so the effect is lessened, but he's still traumatized.
25** A greyhound grabs him and throws him in the air for her teammate to catch, but said teammate is fallen because of making too close a turn while running, so Tod can barely escape.
26* BringMyBrownPants: Various terrified animals.
27* ChekhovsSkill: Essentially how Tod and his kind's entire mindset works. His repertoire of hunting skills and evasive maneuvers are made up of various tricks that worked once and are repeated verbatim - he doesn't question ''why'' something works, he just knows that it ''does''.
28* CunningLikeAFox:
29** Tod engages in a back and forth battle of wits with the hunter, who constantly uses new traps and new hunting methods to try and catch Tod.
30** After noticing Chief tailing him, Tod waits in front of a railroad track for a train to arrive, and dashes across at the last minute. [[spoiler: Chief follows... and you can guess the rest.]]
31* DeathOfAChild:
32** A human child ends up [[spoiler:eating the poison the hunter leaves out for foxes]] and dies.
33** ''Almost none'' of [[spoiler:Tod's]] pups that he sticks around to raise make it to adulthood. One lone pup possibly survived - at the very least, it drops out of the narrative without explicitly dying.
34* {{Determinator}}: The Hunter ''will'' get his revenge on Tod.
35* DogsAreDumb: Played with. ''Untrained curs'' are dumb-- ''hounds'' can smell right through most fox tricks.
36* ADogNamedDog: Tod the tod.
37* DownerEnding: [[spoiler:Tod himself is finally killed]], and with most of his property gone and no more purpose in life, the hunter retires to a nursing home [[spoiler:that does not allow dogs, so he's forced to shoot Copper.]]
38* EvilVsEvil: One interpretation of the novel finds all the characters in the story to be unsympathetic at best, in particular Tod and Copper.
39* FooledByTheSound: The Master uses rabbit calls to draw out and kill [[spoiler:Tod's litter with his second mate]]; the mate also [[spoiler:gets killed when she is drawn out by the artificial sound of a wounded fox kit]].
40* FragileSpeedster: Tod courses with greyhounds in one of the later chapters. They're fast, so fast he works harder to escape them than he ever has before, but one dog is going so fast it doesn't see a fence and ends up breaking its back on it.
41* GhibliHills: Subverted. The forest and the Master's land all get eaten up by urbanization.
42* GreenEyedMonster:
43** Copper, an aging Bloodhound-mix who'd fallen out of his master's favour, absolutely hates Chief, a younger dog who is challenging his role as head dog. He's overjoyed when Chief is [[spoiler: killed prematurely]].
44** As far as the foxes go, Tod's first mate is outright murderous when it comes to territorial boundaries and other vixens (TruthInTelevision).
45* GroinAttack:
46** What Chief uses to distract a bear about to kill his master.
47** Foxes will go for the groin if it's available in both battle and hunting.
48* HaveAGayOldTime: A few uses of "gaily" and "queer".
49* HenpeckedHusband: Tod's first mate is an older and more experienced vixen who picks him because as a young fox, he's easier to mold. For the most part she calls the shots and trusts her own experience rather than Tod's, and Tod conforms himself even when he doesn't like her decisions (like her choice of burrow, which proves fatal to their litter).
50* HeroicRROD[=/=]VillainousRROD: Tod has a very difficult time escaping two greyhounds, and it's noted at the end of the chapter (nine) that Tod's stamina was never the same again because of it.
51* HumansAreCthulhu: Copper knows that "human beings had strange powers that no dog could understand", such as the ability to miraculously scent trails where he cannot (or, as it may be, visually follow footprints and other sign). The formal foxhunters are even more bizarre and inscrutable. Tod is probably the character least awed by humans, and even then they still do things he finds inexplicable from time to time.
52* InHarmsWay: Tod is an adrenaline junkie.
53* InsistentTerminology: Mannix acknowledges that some people might find his habit of calling baby foxes pups instead of cubs a little odd, but defends himself by saying "Foxes are actually little wild dogs and so would have pups". He alternates between the two terms, but generally prefers "pup".
54* {{Jerkass}}: Both title characters. There's Tod, who hangs around by the hunter's dogs and taunts them while they're chained. When Chief finally gets loose and chases Tod, he [[spoiler:kills the dog by leading it into a trap via a train]]. And Copper, whose jealously toward Chief makes him so hateful of the dog that [[spoiler:he's ''happy'' when Chief is killed by the fox.]]
55* [[KickTheDog Kick The Fox]]: The hunter [[spoiler: kills at least two of Tod's mates and at least two litters of Tod's kits]].
56* KillSteal: One reason Copper hates Chief is the latter's habit of picking up scent trails by luck and leading the hunting pack off along it, rather than the methodical way Copper works out the trails. He also refuses to kill steal himself when the young hound Red opens his first line - he just confirms the find and elevates the newbie to a full member of the tracking pack.
57* LastOfHisKind: Eventually, [[spoiler:Tod, Copper, and the hunter are the last of the wild old guard.]]
58* {{Mockumentary}}: Of the serious sort.
59* NewMeat: Red the July hound. He opens his very first trail on the bear hunt, and the bear later kills him.
60* NoNameGiven: The hunter, who is referred to as [[EveryoneCallsHimBarkeep the Master]] by Copper and the hunter or the Man by Tod.
61* TheNounAndTheNoun
62* OldDog: Copper
63* PetTheDog:
64** A different hunter killed both Tod's mother and siblings, but kept and raised Tod as a pet.
65** Despite coming across as heartlessly opportunistic for much of the story, Tod has a few moments when he shows something akin to compassion. When he finds a strange fox stuck in a trap, he feels compelled to help, but has no idea how. He still stays with the doomed fox until he senses the hunter approaching. Another time is when he meets his second mate; a male fox is trying to force himself on her and Tod chases him away. Instead of treating the vixen the same way as that male fox, he goes to find food for her and waits for her to calm down and trust him. Only after that's achieved does he mate with her.
66* ThePlague: Rabies.
67* PoorCommunicationKills: Foxes of course do not have language, so fox parents cannot simply tell their offspring that winter is coming and that it would be a good idea to learn hunting skills in summer. [[spoiler:Tod cannot communicate to his family that the hunter is using a rabbit-scream call as bait.]]
68* PredatorsAreMean: They certainly take extreme pleasure in killing things. Skirts the edge of the trope since they're still only trying to make a living.
69* ProperlyParanoid: Tod, on multiple occasions:
70** His original mate picks a birthing den that's a single tunnel leading to a single burrow. Tod, having spent his short time as a wild pup in a generations-old fox den with multiple entrances and burrows, thinks it's a DeathTrap. [[spoiler:He's right.]]
71** During the rabies epidemic, [[spoiler:strychnine baits are left out for population control. Tod never eats one directly, but he gets a dose via some carrion that has passed through no less than six previous victims.]] The experience so traumatises Tod that he lives on fruit and roots for a few days, and never eats meat from anything he didn't kill himself ever again.
72* PyrrhicVictory: [[spoiler:At the end of the story, the hunter has managed to kill Tod. However, he has to retire in a nursing home and shoot Copper to avoid abandoning the old dog.]]
73* RomanAClef: The final chapter is based on a real hunt in which [[spoiler:a part bloodhound named Boston chased a fox named Baldy for a day and half, covering 150 miles. Both animals dropped dead at the end of the hunt.]]
74* ShownTheirWork: Mannix spent over a year studying foxes, which included watching them in the wild, interviewing hunters and even keeping a pair of red foxes in his home. He was also extremely well-versed in how scent tracking works. It shows.
75* ShootTheDog: [[spoiler:To avoid abandoning him in his old age.]]
76* SnowMeansDeath: Primarily because prey is scarce, but also because [[spoiler:winter is trapping season.]]
77* SparedByTheAdaptation: [[spoiler: Chief]] dies in the novel and the [[RecursiveAdaptation book of the film]], but not the Creator/{{Disney}} film that inspired the [[RecursiveAdaptation book of the film of the book]]. [[spoiler:There's also the matter of the two title characters surviving.]]
78* SummonBiggerFish: In this case, Tod uses a train to [[spoiler: off Chief]].
79* TemptingFate: After first being persued by Chief, Tod is completely worn out from the chase and hopes to never see the hunter and his dogs again. Given this is the second chapter...
80* ThroughHisStomach: Tod decides being a mated fox might not be so bad after his first mate helps him kill a pheasant and later proves that a hunting pair is a lot more successful than a lone fox.
81* TimeSkip: Chapter nine begins with noting that years have passed and Tod's range has changed nearly completely due to urbanization.
82* TooDumbToLive: Yes, little boy, go ahead and pick up and eat that hog crackling you found on the side of the road.
83* VillainProtagonist: In one interpretation, [[EvilVersusEvil both the eponymous characters Tod and Copper]].
84* WhatHappenedToTheMouse: [[spoiler:What happened to the last surviving pup of Tod's second litter?]]
85* {{Xenofiction}}: None of the animals can talk, and much of the book is spent characterizing them without dialogue.

Top