

Tommy Brock carrying the sack with the seven baby rabbits inside it. Even though he sometimes eats small rabbits, Tommy Brock is on very friendly terms with the rabbit Old Mr. Tod has six different homes in different parts of the countryside.

All of the rabbits are afraid of him, partly because they do not know in which part of the countryside he will appear next. Tod has been adapted for radio and television. Tod also features prominently in Beatrix Potter's children's book The Tale of Kitty-in-Boots, which was written in 1914 but was not published until 2016. Tod arrives at his home and finds Tommy Brock squatting there, a fight ensues. He and his cousin Peter Rabbit track Tommy Brock down to one of the homes of the fox Mr. Benjamin Bunny sets off to rescue his children. He puts the seven baby rabbits in a sack and carries them away, intending to eat them later. Bouncer falls asleep, Tommy Brock takes advantage of the situation.

Bouncer invites Tommy Brock into his home. The badger Tommy Brock, although he has been known to eat rabbits, is a friend of Old Mr. The plot is set in motion when Benjamin Bunny and his wife Flopsy go out and leave their seven baby rabbits in the care of Benjamin's father Old Mr. Tod has traditionally appealed more to boys than to girls. Unlike the majority of Beatrix Potter's works, The Tale of Mr. It was originally published in a larger format than was normal for Potter's children's books with more illustrations, sixteen in color and forty-two in black and white. Tod is one of Beatrix Potter's longer stories. It is a sequel to Potter's 1909 book The Tale of the Flopsy Bunnies and features characters who first appeared in The Tale of Peter Rabbit (1902) and The Tale of Benjamin Bunny (1904). Tod is a children's fantasy story by the British author and illustrator Beatrix Potter. Front cover of an American first edition of The Tale of Mr.
