Brian's Hunt

Brian's Hunt is a 2003 young adult novel by Gary Paulsen. It is the fifth and final book in the award-winning Hatchet series, which deals with Brian Robeson, a boy who learns wilderness survival when he is stranded after a plane wreck.[1][2]

Brian's Hunt
AuthorGary Paulsen
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
SeriesBrian's Saga
GenreNovel
PublisherRandom House
Publication date
2003
Media typeHardcover and paperback
Pages182 pp
ISBN978-0307929594
Preceded byBrian's Return 

Plot summary

Brian, who is now sixteen years old, is canoeing through the Canadian wilderness. He realizes that the woods are now his home and he will never be happy in modern society with its noise, pollution, and inauthentic people. He now spends his time in the wild hunting, fishing, and home schooling himself. While Brian does not miss human contact, he finds his thoughts frequently turning to Kay-gwa-daush (also known as Susan), the only daughter of the Cree family who rescued him at the end of Brian's Winter. Though he has only seen her photograph, her family has described her as an adventurous, self-reliant young woman, and Brian wonders if she might be a kindred spirit.

While canoeing, Brian finds a seriously wounded Malamute dog, which he nurses back to health. The dog is clearly domesticated, and Brian begins to worry that whatever maimed the dog may have done the same to her owners. He remembers his Cree friends, the Smallhorns, and decides to go check on them.

When Brian reaches their cabin, he finds that a bear had killed the parents and apparently chased Susan into hiding. Brian returns her to her home and buries the family while she radios for help. The authorities arrive to take Susan to relatives in Winnipeg. Brian, along with the dog, stays behind in order to hunt down and kill the bear, knowing very well that the hunt could cost him his life.

Brian uses skills he has learned (explained in past books Hatchet, Brian's Return, and Brian's Winter) to search for the bear that killed his friends. He finds bear tracks on an island and begins to follow them. He later realizes that he was walking in a circle. Soon, the hunter becomes the hunted. The bear is actually following Brian. The next day, instead of moving on, he waits for the bear. After a hard-fought battle with the bear, Brian is triumphant.

gollark: I disagree with "a deity cant perform bad acts".
gollark: "God" implies a sentient being with agency or something, generally.
gollark: The trouble with "god is X"-type arguments is that they effectively just work by shifting definitions around a bit and imply some extra things about god/X you aren't proving.
gollark: ???
gollark: Stuff like "the universe is god" ends up just fiddling with the definitions of "god" enough to make it useless, while bringing on all the god-related baggage.

References

  1. "Brian's Hunt". Kirkus Reviews. November 15, 2003. Retrieved February 5, 2020.
  2. "Children's Book Review: Brian's Hunt". Publishers Weekly. December 22, 2003. Retrieved February 5, 2020.


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