#064 / 100
Burrow1957
064of 100in Top 100 Books

Burrow

P. Onuoha 1957 Stories DE

A defining entry in the Top 100 Books. Sitting at number 64, Burrow earned its place through a combination of craft, context, and consensus among the twenty-four editors who maintain this list. The companions immediately above and below it on this ranking are worth reading in the same sitting.

8.0
editor consensus80 / 100
Your rating

Position in the list

This entry sits at #064 of books.← lower-ranked  ·  higher-ranked →
#064
#100#075#050#025#001

About this entry

A defining entry in the Top 100 Books. Sitting at number 64, Burrow earned its place through a combination of craft, context, and consensus among the twenty-four editors who maintain this list. The companions immediately above and below it on this ranking are worth reading in the same sitting. The editors’ note placed it here on the basis of three criteria: durability across re-reads (or re-watches, or re-plays), influence on the entries that came after it, and the degree to which it could only have been made by the person — or team — who made it.

In the comparative table maintained by the Books desk, Burrow sits within a band of 6167 that contains some of the most contested swaps of the year. Editors vote with arguments; a swap requires three editors and one written defense.

From Wikipedia

A burrow is a hole or tunnel excavated into the ground by an animal to construct a space suitable for habitation or temporary refuge, or as a byproduct of locomotion. Burrows provide a form of shelter against predation and exposure to the elements, and can be found in nearly every biome and among various biological interaction types, including symbiosis and competition. Many animal species are known to form burrows. These species range from small amphipods, to very large vertebrate species such as the polar bear. Burrows can be constructed into a wide variety of substrates and can range in complexity from a simple tube a few centimeters long to a complex network of interconnecting tunnels and chambers hundreds or thousands of meters in total length; an example of the latter level of complexity, a well-developed burrow, would be a rabbit warren.

Read on Wikipedia ↗

Also in Stories

Same decade — 1950s

01
Lv 1 · Browser0 pts
0 / 100 to Lv 2+1 / 200px scrolled
Theme
Display
Density