karen's Reviews > Hatchet
Hatchet (Brian's Saga, #1)
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yes yes yes!! thank you to all the goodreaders who recommended this to me after my love for island of the blue dolphins became known. it turns out i love survival stories!! with teens!! and i wish i could say i never tore my eyes from the page and read this in an hour, but i have been having a distractedish day today; emailing my dad for father's day (everyone: call your dads!! or if they are at work, email-chat them!) and then there was a fire across the street from me (which is my number one all time fear) and the people in the building are so casual about it - there are two fire trucks in the street, and firefighters swarming everywhere, and i look in the windows and in two different apartments, there are people just sitting and watching and smoking cigarettes. what is wrong with them?? don't they care that their building is on fire?? don't they feel the fear i feel?? did they light their cigarettes from their blazing belongings and treasures?? i don't understand their stoicism in the face of fire. but you know who loves fire?? brian. he uses it to survive in the wilderness. seamless segue back into the review. it's great. i could read 400 more pages of this story. and despite my own fears of the fire leaping across the street to consume me and my beloved books, i could still engage in his plight: when he d the h in the w (clever code prevents spoilers) - i actually gasped out loud. and there were several times when he overcame a particular setback that i smiled. i totally cared about this character. i would love more survivaly stories, if anyone's got 'em.

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Finished Reading
June 21, 2009
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Comments Showing 1-50 of 254 (254 new)

Yes, The River is a sequel and Brian's Winter and I forget the others.
Of course some of it's pretty good! All the way "down" to board books--genius lurks!
Of course some of it's pretty good! All the way "down" to board books--genius lurks!




Did I ever mention that I have a Wilderness Survival merit badge from my Boy Scout days?





They only focused on the astronauts and politicians. And Steven Spielberg.


Ah, I see.

He's also an author worth hearing if you get the chance. Gruff and sweet and grandfatherly cool to the nines!
And read "Harris and Me." DO IT!

I was a card carrying member of the Boy Scouts of America in high school; we had this co-ed camping group that did extended backpacking trips. I loved it. Missed the napalm lesson. Do remember how to hang my food high when in a bear sanctuary.


jen, in your town, they probably assume all "nuisance attacks" are the handiwork of the guy that made that movie... you are probably making life hard for him.

I will admit though that I was too afraid of ever actually trying out the recipe, knowing my parents would not be too happy if I happened to set fire to their house, the neighbors house, the woods behind the golf course, or the school playground with burning vapors I had no idea how to put out. So, what I know might be full of shit.


I'm not sure if anything in the Anarchist Cookbook actually works, I've heard so many mixed things over the years of little mistakes that may or may not be intentional in the book that could result in blowing yourself up.


Yeah, but why, Greg? Why?


I think we'd only let the styrofoam soak for hardly any time at all, and I remember something about having to let it soak for a few days...in any case I'm sure it was just gasoline. I remember trying a variety of these pyro experiments mostly in a more isolated area where a friend of mine lived. One point I remember thinking that we we're going to burn down an entire field of corn where we'd tried to explode something or another. Things never exploded though, just burned until we reasoned that this thing was not going to explode so we could approach it and extinguish the flames. Reckless, reckless days. Luckily that all stopped once we discovered drugs and alcohol. Whew.

Yeah, but why, Greg? Why?
"
Because we all secretly have the spirit of Jesus in us and want to baptize the world with Fire, not water...

* Hatchet (1987) (Has an alternate ending which makes a continuity with Brian's Winter)
* The River (Hatchet: The Return, The Return) (1991)
* Brian's Winter (Hatchet: Winter) (1996)
* Brian's Return (Hatchet: The Call) (1999)
* Brian's Hunt (2003)
I don't know if they are any good, but I think most of his books are about surviving in the wilderness.
I feel like Jack London at least has some short stories like that.

my brother use to constantly yell at me for setting off the fire alarm.

I also think that living in a state where it was near impossible to get fireworks setting things on fire was the next best thing.
Boy Scouts was good for the fire thing too, it was kind of like sanctioned fun with fire, unless you used aerosol cans and tried to suck the fire back into the can and then throw it into the woods. Then you got in trouble even if nothing happened and no one got hurt....

I was thinking of either some hilarious Freudian explanation or a evolutionary psychology style explanation that would actually make some sense, but I'd totally forgotten about the universal desire to turn the world to cinders. It's so obvious in hindsight.


my brother use to constantly yell at me for setting off the fire alarm."
Wow, how great would that have been to find out that the cute girl you liked in grade school also wanted to burn things just as much as you?? We need to encourage girls to openly express their desire to raze things with flames.

I would say ask chances are she did. All of my friends did. It's why girls constantly do that aging paper with fire thing, because mommy won't get mad and you get to play with fire.


I sang this after his song, matching his chorus:
"Smokey the bear wears brown underwear,
he poops and pees right down his knees
and ruins his underwear"
Vintage Smokey propaganda- the song is at the very end...the dude talking about forest fire prevention is smoking a cigarette in the forest!

Do you know you CAN keep on reading Brian's story! There are like four sequels. Also, there is a nonfiction companion called "Guts" where Gary Paulsen tells you stuff from his real life that showed up in the book.