Hatchet (novel)

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Hatchet
First edition cover
Author Gary Paulsen
Cover Artist Neil Waldman
Country United States
Language English
Series Brian Robeson
Genre(s) Novel
Publisher Bradbury Press
Released 30 September, 1987
Media Type Hardcover and Paperback
Pages 195 p. (first edition, hardback)
ISBN ISBN 0-02-770130-1 (first edition, hardback)
Followed by Brian's Winter

Hatchet is a 1987 Newbery Honor award-winning wilderness survival novel written by Gary Paulsen.

Contents

[edit] Plot summary

In Hatchet, thirteen-year-old Brian Robeson is stranded alone in the Canadian wilderness. The bush-pilot of a Cessna 406, in which he is traveling to visit his father in the Canadian oil fields, suffers a fatal heart attack, and Brian must crash-land the plane. The plane sinks in a remote lake, and Brian is left with only his clothes, along with a time-tested hatchet his mother has given him; his only survival tool.

Brian figures out how to make fire by striking the blade of the hatchet on flint. He forces himself to eat whatever food he can find, such as turtle eggs. He deals with a porcupine, bear, skunk, moose, and a tornado. He eventually becomes quite a craftsman, crafting a bow and arrows to hunt birds and fishing with a spear.

During his isolation, Brian reflects on his parents' recent divorce, and the dark secret only he knows: his mother was having an affair.

Brian was saved when a violent storm hits the woods, tossing the plane wreckage to the surface. Brian breaks into the plane and recovers the plane's survival pack, which contains an emergency transmitter. Brian accidentally activates the transmitter, and is rescued by a fur trader.That is the story of Hatchet

[edit] Other Books

Paulsen followed Hatchet with four additional novels about Brian. In the first, Brian's Winter, Paulsen answers (by popular demand, he says) the question of what would have happened if Brian had been forced to spend a winter in the Canadian wilderness. He tells an alternate version of the story of Hatchet in which Brian does not use the survival pack radio to call for help. In Paulsen's second sequel to Hatchet, The River, a government agent asks Brian to return to the Canadian wilderness-about 100 miles from his original camp-and show him how he managed to survive. The agent gets struck by lightning and falls into a coma, leaving Brian to construct a raft to transport him to a trading post. The third additional novel, titled Brian's Return, tells the story of Brian returning to the Canadian wilderness in a canoe, aptly named the Raft, a gift given to him at the end of the book, The River. In 2003, Paulsen wrote Brian's Hunt, in which Brian finds an injured dog while in his canoe. He thinks that the dog belongs to trappers, so he goes to his Indian friends to ask if anyone lost a dog. When he arrives at their house, he finds the mangled bodies of his friends. He finds out a bear killed them and noticed that one of their daughters is missing. He later finds her in a canoe out on the lake and goes to hunt the bear. He finds it after a couple of days and kills it in hand-to-hand combat.

[edit] Awards and nominations

Newbery Honors award-winning novel

[edit] Film, TV and theatrical adaptations

Hatchet was made into a TV movie in 1990 entitled A Cry in the Wild.


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