

|
hatchet (Audio CD)
by Gary Paulsen
Category:
Fiction, Children's book, Adventure, Ages 9-12 |
Market price: ¥ 168.00
MSL price:
¥ 148.00
[ Shop incentives ]
|
Stock:
Pre-order item, lead time 3-7 weeks upon payment [ COD term does not apply to pre-order items ] |
|
MSL rating:
Good for Gifts
|
MSL Pointer Review:
A spectacular novel of survival and adventure, Hatchet has been a long-time favorites of children and adults. |
If you want us to help you with the right titles you're looking for, or to make reading recommendations based on your needs, please contact our consultants. |
 Detail |
 Author |
 Description |
 Excerpt |
 Reviews |
|
|
Author: Gary Paulsen
Publisher: Listening Library
Pub. in: April, 2004
ISBN: 0807204773
Pages:
Measurements: 5.7 x 4.9 x 1 inches
Origin of product: USA
Order code: BB00088
Other information: ISBN-13: 978-0807204771
Language: American English
|
Rate this product:
|
- Awards & Credential -
The bestselling book of Gary Paulsen and a real adventure classic. |
- MSL Picks -
In the book, Hatchet, by Gary Paulsen, Brian is going to visit his dad in Canada. Everything goes well until Brian's pilot has a heart attack. Brian ends up having to crash land the plane into the water. Brian somehow survives, but unfortunately the pilot doesn't. But sadly Brian was so scared that he tried killing himself by cutting himself with his hatchet. Now Brian has to survive in the Northern Canadian woods all alone for who knows how long. I definitely recommend this book because it is very detailed and well thought out.
Brian plays a big part in this book. Brian is a very intelligent kid that knows a lot about being outdoors. Brian ends up having to do some weird things such as take a shower four times a day because he was sprayed by a skunk. Brian also ends up learning a lot too. Brian can teach himself things like how to spear a fish. He learned one day while he was spearing fish that in the water there is some kind of reflection, so you don't aim straight at the fish. He also taught himself how to crash land a plane into the water. The cool thing about Brian is that he is smart, but he knows how to make himself smarter. The main point of this book is survival. Brian struggles but finally successfully finds the survival pack in the plane containing food, matches, pots, medicine, and a compass. Brian has to live out in the woods all by himself with just a hatchet. Brian ends up making a spear, a bow, a raft, and a shelter, all with just the hatchet. Brian had a big log shelter and to improve it, he wove little sticks through it to make it kind of like a basket. He of course spears fish with the spear, but it took him a while to actually get the fish. Brian also learns how to shoot deer, moose, and some other animals with his bows. So in other words, Brian taught himself how to hunt. This book takes place in the northern Canadian woods. The woods are near the little lake where Brian had to crash land the plane. In these woods there are many big animals such as, moose, bear, deer, etc. But unfortunately Brian had to kill some of the animals to survive. Every now and then Brian will go for a swim in the pond near the woods.
Overall this book was great, probably one of the best books I've ever read. I would recommend this book to a person who enjoys reading nonfiction books and knows what its like to be out in the woods. This book is now easy to read, but not too hard either. You also might enjoy this book a little bit more if you hunt. If you enjoy reading and learning about survival you would love this book. All in all I really enjoyed this book and I'm looking forward to reading all the sequels.
(From quoting Scott W. Bartelt, USA)
Target readers:
Who Should Read This Book? Everyone. Hachet is one of those rare books that can be read and enjoyed by children and adults. No matter who you are, you're likely to learn some important lessons about yourself.
|
Customers who bought this product also bought:
 |
Hatchet (Paperback)
by Gary Paulsen
A spectacular novel of survival and adventure, Hatchet has been a long-time favorites of children and adults. |
 |
A Ring of Endless Light (Paperback)
by Madeleine L'Engle
A girl encounters love, friendship, and questions the true purpose of life, as well as what death truly means. Using symbolism and metaphors to represent life and death, the book celebrates everything beautiful and good in this world, which often goes unnoticed in the midst of the darkness, fear and confusion. |
 |
Out Of The Dust (Apple Signature Edition) (Paperback)
by Karen Hesse
Written in free verse, this award-winning story is set in the heart of the Great Depression, an unforgettable tribute to hope and inner strength. |
 |
Walk Two Moons (Paperback) (Paperback)
by Sharon Creech
The Newbery Award winning Walk Two Moons is a combination of beautifully written stories that unite to provide readers with insights into their own lives and the lives of others with regard to adolescence and grief. |
 |
A Wrinkle in Time (Paperback)
by Madeleine L'Engle
A Wrinkle in Time shows that all people have to preserver to get though those hard times. Depending on whether you’re scared or something's to difficult, you always need to break through those challenges. |
 |
Island of the Blue Dolphins (Paperback)
by Scott O'Dell
A gripping story of battling wild dogs and sea elephants, and also an uplifting adventure of the spirit. |
 |
Number the Stars (Laurel Leaf Books) (Mass Market Paperback) (Paperback)
by Lois Lowry
During the German occupation of Denmark, ten-year-old Annemarie learns how to be brave and courageous when she helps shelter her Jewish friend from the Nazis. |
|
Born May 17, 1939, Gary Paulsen is one of America's most popular writers for young people. Although he was never a dedicated student, Paulsen developed a passion for reading at an early age. After a librarian gave him a book to read - along with his own library card - he was hooked. He began spending hours alone in the basement of his apartment building, reading one book after another.
Running away from home at the age of 14 and traveling with a carnival, Paulsen acquired a taste for adventure. A youthful summer of rigorous chores on a farm; jobs as an engineer, construction worker, ranch hand, truck driver, and sailor; and two rounds of the 1,180-mile Alaskan dog sled race, the Iditarod; have provided ample material from which he creates his powerful stories.
Paulsen's realization that he would become a writer came suddenly when he was working as a satellite technician for an aerospace firm in California. One night he walked off the job, never to return. He spent the next year in Hollywood as a magazine proofreader, working on his own writing every night. Then he left California and drove to northern Minnesota where he rented a cabin on a lake; by the end of the winter, he had completed his first novel.
Living in the remote Minnesota woods, Paulsen eventually turned to the sport of dog racing, and entered the 1983 Iditarod. In 1985, after running the Iditarod for the second time, he suffered an attack of angina and was forced to give up his dogs. "I started to focus on writing the same energies and efforts that I was using with dogs. So we're talking 18-, 19-, 20-hour days completely committed to work. Totally, viciously, obsessively committed to work, the way I'd run dogs....I still work that way, completely, all the time. I just work. I don't drink, I don't fool around, I'm just this way....The end result is there's a lot of books out there."
It is Paulsen's overwhelming belief in young people that drives him to write. His intense desire to tap deeply into the human spirit and to encourage readers to observe and care about the world around them has brought him both enormous popularity with young people and critical acclaim from the children's book community. Paulsen is a master storyteller who has written more than 175 books and some 200 articles and short stories for children and adults. He is one of the most important writers of young adult literature today and three of his novels - Hatchet, Dogsong, and The Winter Room - were Newbery Honor Books. His books frequently appear on the best books lists of the American Library Association.
Paulsen has received many letters from readers (as many as 200 a day) telling him they felt Brian Robeson's story in Hatchet was left unfinished by his early rescue, before the winter came and made things really tough. They wanted to know what would happen if Brian were not rescued, if he had to survive in the winter. Paulsen says, "Since my life has been one of survival in winter - running two Iditarods, hunting and trapping as a boy and young man - the challenge became interesting, and so I researched and wrote Brian's Winter, showing what could and perhaps would have happened had Brian not been rescued."
Paulsen and his wife, Ruth Wright Paulsen, an artist who has illustrated several of his books, divide their time between a home in New Mexico and a boat in the Pacific.
|
From Publisher
This Newbery Honor book is a dramatic, heart-stopping story of a boy who, following a plane crash in the Canadian wilderness, must learn to survive with only a hatchet and his own wits. Ages 12-up.
Grade 8-12 Brian Robeson, 13, is the only passenger on a small plane flying him to visit his father in the Canadian wilderness when the pilot has a heart attack and dies. The plane drifts off course and finally crashes into a small lake. Miraculously Brian is able to swim free of the plane, arriving on a sandy tree-lined shore with only his clothing, a tattered windbreaker, and the hatchet his mother had given him as a present. The novel chronicles in gritty detail Brian's mistakes, setbacks, and small triumphs as, with the help of the hatchet, he manages to survive the 54 days alone in the wilderness. Paulsen effectively shows readers how Brian learns patienceto watch, listen, and think before he actsas he attempts to build a fire, to fish and hunt, and to make his home under a rock overhang safe and comfortable. An epilogue discussing the lasting effects of Brian's stay in the wilderness and his dim chance of survival had winter come upon him before rescue adds credibility to the story. Paulsen tells a fine adventure story, but the sub-plot concerning Brian's preoccupation with his parents' divorce seems a bit forced and detracts from the book. As he did in Dogsong (Bradbury, 1985), Paulsen emphasizes character growth through a careful balancing of specific details of survival with the protagonist's thoughts and emotions. Barbara Chatton, College of Education, University of Wyoming, Laramie.
Brian Robeson, the sole passenger in a single-engine plane, is on his way to visit his father in the Canadian oil fields when his pilot suffers a heart attack. Alone and desperate, Brian guides the plane to a landing on an isolated lake. In a straightforward but compelling narration, Coyote captures Brian's terror, anguish and exultation as he learns to survive alone in the wilderness. Abridgment is imperceptible. Musical effects underscore an air of suspense, mystery and dread. D.M.L. The story of thirteen-year-old Brian Robeson's survival in the Canadian wilderness is undone by this unfortunate production. Coyote, whose voice is perfect for telling this story, reads at one pace and in one tone of voice throughout, eliminating tension and suspense, as well as humor and compassion. Background music interrupts when the listener is most drawn in, making concentration on the narrative difficult. A sad rendering of a thrilling adventure. S.G. Editor's Note: The above opposing reviews illustrate how evaluation can be diametrically opposed even when both reviewers are experienced library selectors and listeners.
|
View all 12 comments |
kochie (MSL quote), USA
<2007-11-16 00:00>
Stranded in the Canadian wilderness after his two-passenger plane crashes, thirteen-year old Brian Robeson is forced to tap into reserves of resourcefulness and determination that he never knew he had in order to survive. In Hatchet, Gary Paulsen has managed to take the classic idea of a survival story and with it create an original and engaging masterpiece. This is definitely a book that everyone should read sometime in their life, and is one that especially every teenage boy must read. Paulsen's writing style and creativity are sure to capture and keep the interest of every young reader. This book is written especially for teenage boys, and they are extremely able to connect with it. In Hatchet, Gary Paulsen makes excellent use of characterization and realism to effectively connect with and captivate male young adult readers.
One of the first instances in which Paulsen uses characterization effectively to connect with readers is when, while Brian is flying north in the bush plane, the pilot asks Brian if he would like to try taking the controls of the airplane. Brian at first responds the invitation doubtfully: "He had never been in any kind of plane, never seen the cockpit of a plane except in films or on television" (4). This example reveals to the reader that Brian is just an ordinary thirteen year-old boy just like them. He has not had any special upbringing or training that would prepare him to meet the challenges that he will face; he is just a regular teenager. Before the action of the book has even begun, similarities are presented between Brian and the reader. As the reader begins to identify with Brian, they become interested in how a person that is like them will respond to the challenges are put in his way, and so become more involved in the book.
Another example of characterization is when Brian is reflecting on the recent divorce of his parents: "How he hated lawyers who sat with their comfortable smiles and tried to explain to him in legal terms how all that he lived in was coming apart" (Paulsen 2-3). This example shows again that Brian is just a normal teenager with his own struggles and difficulties. While many readers may not be going through a divorce, they have their own problems in their lives that are hard for them. This struggle gives Brian's character more depth and allows the reader to more fully identify with him. As a stronger connection forms between Brian and the reader, the reader becomes more interested in what will happen to Brian and becomes more fully invested in the book.
This connection is strengthened further through Paulsen's use of characterization when Brian tries to light a fire without matches for the first time. He has a very difficult time getting the fire started, and finds himself thinking: "If only I had matches ... How did they used to do it? he thought. Rub two sticks together?" (65). Many times throughout the book, Brian finds that nothing in his earlier life has prepared him to solve the problem that is before him at that instant. Again the reader sees that Brian is a normal person with a background that is probably very similar to their own. They see that this is just a regular boy who is used to life in the city, but who now has these challenges thrust upon him. Once again, the reader becomes concerned with how Brian will overcome his challenges, because perhaps they would make choices similar to the ones made by this boy who is so like them.
Paulsen uses effective characterization again when describing Brian's emotional responses to his challenges. On the second day that Brian is stranded alone in the wilderness, after a particularly difficult night, Brian is "almost overcome with self-pity. He was starving and bitten and hurt and lonely and ugly and afraid and so completely miserable that it was like being in a pit, a dark, deep pit with no way out" (70). This response to his trials is a very normal and human response. The reader recognizes that it is very ordinary to have such feelings when going through such a hard time, and indeed realizes that they themselves would most likely feel much the same way. Once again, the connection that the reader has with Brian and the story is strengthened.
In addition to using effective characterization, Paulsen also successfully uses realistic and believable events to connect with the reader. One of the most significant ways in which Paulsen makes the plot of the story believable is that bad things happen to Brian. When Brian finds some berries to eat on his first day in the wilderness, he thinks that he has finally had some good luck, but the berries end up making him extremely sick: "Never anything like this. Never. It was if all the berries, all the pits had exploded in the center of him, ripped and tore at him" (67). This is just one example of the many misfortunes that come to Brian throughout the book. This makes the story seem very realistic because bad things do in fact happen to everybody. Brian does not have any extraordinary luck or fortune; he is just like anybody else. Anybody who reads this book will know that misfortunes are a fact of life. This allows the reader to form a connection with the book because it reflects what the reader has observed in his own life.
Another way in which this book is realistic is that events occur suddenly with little or no warning. Only a few days into his isolation, Brian goes to sleep feeling good about the day's success only to be woken up the next morning being injured by a porcupine: "So fast, he thought. So fast things change. When he'd gone to sleep he had satisfaction and in just a moment it was all different" (81). Throughout the book, Brian experiences many other sudden changes in his fortunes. Again, this makes the story seem realistic. In real life, events occur without any warning. There is rarely any foreshadowing to signal that something bad is about to happen. Once again the reader sees truths from real life reflected in the book, and the story becomes easier to believe and to connect with.
The story is also realistic because it is hard for Brian to find solutions to his problems. For example, when Brian tries to make a bow to use to catch fish, his first attempt is a failure: "He put an arrow to the string, pulled it back to his cheek, pointed it at a dirt hummock, and at that precise instant the bow wood exploded in his hands sending splinters and chips of wood into his face" (124). This failure comes after he has already failed at making and using a spear to catch fish, and even after he later successfully makes a bow it is difficult for Brian to learn how to use it effectively. Brian must figure out solutions to his problems by himself just like people in the real world must find their own answers to their difficulties. Those answers are not magically presented to him. The reader realizes that this is the way that things actually happen, and so again the story becomes more believable and reader becomes more interested in it.
Paulsen also uses excellent imagery and details to make the story seem tangible and realistic. When Brian stops for a few moments to pay attention to his surroundings, he hears things that he has never experienced before: "When he started to listen, really listen, he heard thousands of things. Hisses and blurks, small sounds, birds singing, hum of insects, splashes from the fish jumping--there was great noise here" (41). Details and images like this are found throughout the entire book. These descriptions allow the reader to form picture of where the events described in the book are taking place. The details that are given make the setting seem richer, fuller, and more tangible. This firm setting allows the reader to sink deeper into the action of the book because they now have a place established in their minds where the events are taking place.
All of these instances of characterization and realism, as well as the countless others found throughout the entire book, work together to effectively attract the interest of male young adult readers, as well as other readers of all ages. Paulsen is able to masterfully use these techniques to create a story that is engaging and captivating. This is one of the best books for young readers that I have come across. I would strongly recommend it for anyone who is looking for a good book to read, and if somebody is not looking for a book I would recommend it to them anyways. This book is a must-read for everybody! |
A reader (MSL quote), USA
<2007-11-16 00:00>
Hatchet is a great adventure story about a 13 year old boy who crashed in an air plane in the wilderness. He had to learn how to survive by himself with only his hatchet. Brian was 13 and going to visit his dad in northern Canada. While they were flying, the pilot showed Brian how to fly the plane. The pilot had a heart attack during the flight and died, so Brian had to crash land the plane by himself in a lake. This was a terrible experience for him. It reminds me of the time I was on a river raft going down the rapids, and I thought I might die if we flipped in the boat. Once it was over, I told my mom I never wanted to do anything like that again. When he woke up from the crash, Brian built a shelter to protect himself. He realized he was all alone with no food or supplies. He felt scared. Then he remembered what his teacher had told him about staying positive and staying focused. I can relate to this by trying to be positive on the tennis court. When I am playing a big match, I am alone. I know I have to depend on myself. In this situation I try to stay positive and calm. Once when Brian was sleeping, a porcupine came into his shelter. When Brian woke up, the porcupine swung his tail and hit Brian's leg. This made him cry and feel sorry for himself. Then he realized that feeling sorry for himself would not help him to survive. During my tennis matches, I try not to get down on myself if I am losing. I try to be confident instead of feeling sorry for myself if I get behind. Finally after about two months Brian was rescued. His time in the wilderness had taught him to be more cautious. Now he also noticed more things around him. He had learned how to survive on his own. He knew he could take care of himself, and he felt confident. I loved this book because it showed how a boy could grow when he had to face big problems by himself. I think every person in our class could benefit from reading this story . |
Jenny (MSL quote), USA
<2007-11-16 00:00>
book. Brain's parents' divorce forces him to visit his parents at different times of the year. The summer is the time for him to fly to see his father in Canada. He takes the trip in a small Cessna sky plane with two passengers, the pilot and himself. After several hours the pilot suffers a heartattack and the plane goes down. This marked the beginning of Brain's survival time. Paulson's discription of the plane, the accident and the setting leave a true picture of the events. Because of his style of writing I was able to invision everything in clear detail. Time and again as Brain was faced with a bear attack, finding food, and other obsticles, pictures and scenes from the book appeared vividly in my mind. I am not a true reading fan but I felt like i couldn't put this book down. It is a great story with a good plot and Paulsen's words and desciptions kept me reading. This book flows and keeps a constant push to read. It is one of the best books that I have read and I will be reading it again. I would recomend this book to anyone who loves adventure and suspense. It is a good book for both kids and adults, its easily understood and fun to read. It is an all around a good book and great for anyone. |
Jennifer (MSL quote), USA
<2007-11-16 00:00>
A must read for the adventure seeker and wilderness lover!Brian Robeson, thirteen, boards a small bush plane along with thepilot. He is going to visit his father in Canada, after his parent's separation, knowing the secret, the reason for their divorce. Brian leaves New York with a hatchet, a parting gift from his mother. Most of the book is about Brian's experiences on his own, learning to take from nature to find food and shelter, learning to hunt and fish and protect himself. Does he live? Is he saved? These questions keep the reader intrigued for all 195 pages of the text. Brian is a strong, well developed character. He evolves, learns and matures from his experience. His story is one of bravery, determination, and the power of positive thinking. Gary Paulsen's writing style is naturally flowing, highly descriptive, and easy to read. The book is a fast read, but is easy to set down and pick up again without losing one's place in the story. A Newbery Honor Book that deserves to be read! |
View all 12 comments |
|
|
|
|