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  1. Legacy. Arguably Gary Paulsen’s most popular book, ‘ Hatchet ’ is a story written in the sands of time. This ageless coming-of-age story is bound to leave one thrilled. One moment you’re happy for Brian; the very next, you’re holding your breath, muttering a prayer for him to survive this one. ‘ Hatchet ’ is a rollercoaster of ...

  2. Full title Hatchet. Author Gary Paulsen. Type of work Novel. Genre Coming-of-age novel; young adult novel; adventure novel; survival story. Language English. Time and place written United States, 1980s. Date of first publication 1987. Publisher Delacorte Books.

  3. Hatchet is a 1987 Newbery Honor -winning young-adult wilderness survival novel written by American writer Gary Paulsen. [1] It is the first novel of five in the Hatchet series. Other novels in the series include The River (1991), Brian's Winter (1996), Brian's Return (1999) and Brian's Hunt (2003). [2] It was first published in September 1987 ...

    • Paulsen Is A Man of The Land.
    • And He'd Still Rather Make His Own Clothes.
    • He’S A Bit of A Misanthrope.
    • He’S Also A Luddite
    • Hatchetand Other Books Are Based on Paulsen’s Own Life
    • Including The Plane Crash and The Moose attack.
    • Paulsen’s Snow Cave Experience Came in handy.
    • But He Never (Successfully) Ate Turtle Eggs.
    • Some of Paulsen’s Books Take Years to Write, But Hatchet only Took Four months.
    • He’S A Champion of Kids, and of Telling Them Hard Truths...

    From a young age, Gary Paulsen was rounding up his own meals in the forest, but also providing his own clothing and shelter, too. He told TeachingBooks.netin a 2010 interview, “I was raised on farms by people who didn't have Wal-Mart. They had to make their own sleds, harnesses, clothing, etc.”

    Even today, he prefers many homemade products to store-bought ones. “Look at Inuit clothing. Their stuff still works better than Cabela's. I've made my own parkas, mukluks, footgear, and it is good to 60 degrees below zero. All I did was copy the patterns that came down from the Inuits.”

    Paulsen is happy to spend his time in all kinds of landscapes—in his New Mexico “shack” or his modest Alaska compound, on his “beat-up sailboat” cruising the Pacific—so long as they’re sparsely populated or even deserted. “I don’t have anything against individuals,” he told the New York Timesin 2006. “But the species is a mess [...] The last time I...

    Paulsen chooses bows over guns for his sustenance hunting and trapping, and mentioned during a 2007 New York Public Libraryonline forum that he’s not a fan of technology and doesn’t “believe in email” (and then some): “I think that what computers have done is just disastrous to the language. I equate them with television; I think they destroy the c...

    The 54 days 13-year-old Hatchet protagonist Brian Robeson spends in the Canadian wilderness are based on Paulsen’s own late childhood and adolescence. During that time, he frequently “fostered” himself in the woods away from his parents, whose rocky marriage made Paulsen’s young life unhappy. Among other things, that meant he needed to find his own...

    The plane crash that dumps Brian alone in the wilderness is a throwback to Paulsen’s early life, too. As a younger man, he was in two forced landings (but not crashes) in bush planes like Brian’s. He told NYPL chatters, “I thought as we went down that if we lived through it I was going to write about it. And everything in the book is what I've done...

    While writing Brian's Winter, which “imagined what it would have been like if Brian had not gotten rescued [at Hatchet’s end] and had to live through the winter,” Paulsen disagreed with his editors, who told him he couldn’t “have Brian sleeping in a snow cave because he would die,” and argued his point from personal experience: “I told them, ‘No, I...

    Paulsen has explained in interviews that he made a point of trying out certain exploratory acts of Brian’s to make sure they’d be safe for adventurous young readers. One area where Brian succeeded but the author failed, however, was in eating raw turtle eggs. Paulsen tried to do so but couldn’t keep them down, he said. However, he found it reasonab...

    In his 200 or so published books, Paulsen has covered woodland living but also cancer, small town- and big city-life, slavery, Victorian-era hardship, Martin Luther King, Jr., careers in airports, and children’s executions, among other topics. When the subject matter isn’t among his varied personal experiences, his research process is extensive; he...

    Above all else, Paulsen tells it like it is. As reviewer Roger Sutton said of Paulsen’s nonfiction work Guts, for example,“He is absolutely candid about the dangers of the wild (such as his eyewitness account of a little boy killed by a young deer) and the consequences of hunger (‘I have eaten grub worms wrapped in fresh dandelion greens’).” Paulse...

    • Janet Burns
  4. Gary Paulsen (1939-2021) Gary Paulsen was an author of novels for young adults whose best-known work, Hatchet (1986), is typical in that most of his stories deal with coming-of-age themes and the wilderness. The success of Hatchet led to four additional novels in the Brain’s Saga series: The River (1991), Brian’s Winter (1996), Brain’s ...

  5. This might as well be the central theme in ‘ Hatchet.’. This is because it has all the other themes tied to it, somehow. For fifty-four days in the wilderness, hope kept Brian going. When the porcupine attacked, hope kept him going. When the skunk attacked, same, it was no different when the moose attacked.

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  7. Jean Craighead George's My Side of the Mountain (1959) is a direct precursor to Hatchet. Its main character, 15-year-old Sam, runs away from home to survive on his great-grandfather's land in the Catskill Mountains. The protagonist of American author Scott O'Dell's The Island of the Blue Dolphins (1960), a Newbery Medal winner, is a 12-year-old ...

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