
As millions of readers of Hatchet, the River and Brian's Winter know, Brian Robeson survived alone in the wilderness by finding solutions to extraordinary challenges. But now that he's back in civilization, he can't find a way to make sense of high school life. He feels disconnected, more isolated than he did alone in the north woods. the answer is to return, to "go back in" for only in the wilderness can Brain discover his true path in life, and where he belongs.
year: 1999, 2001, 2000, 2016
call number/section: 1000, 4, 92, 920
subjects: self-reliance, fiction, wilderness areas, survival, canada, large type books, survival skills, audiobooks, children's audiobooks, survival after airplane accidents, shipwrecks, etc, castaways
Editions

Paulsen, Gary
Delacorte Press (1999)
After his experiences surviving alone in the Canadian wilderness, sixteen-year-old Brian finds it increasingly difficult to live as a normal high school student and begins planning to return to the place where he feels he really belongs.
Schools: 67

Paulsen, Gary
Dell Laurel-Leaf (2001)
After his experiences surviving alone in the Canadian wilderness, sixteen-year-old Brian finds it increasingly difficult to live as a normal high school student and begins planning to return to the place where he feels he really belongs.
Schools: 26

Paulsen, Gary
Thorndike Press (2000)
After his experiences surviving alone in the Canadian wilderness several years earlier, sixteen-year-old Brian finds that he can't seem to fit into "civilization" but must return to the place where he feels he really belongs.
Schools: 0
Paulsen, Gary
s.n.
Schools: 0

Paulsen, Gary
Findaway World, LLC (2016)
After his experiences surviving alone in the Canadian wilderness, sixteen-year-old Brian finds it increasingly difficult to live as a normal high school student and begins planning to return to the place where he feels he really belongs.
Schools: 2
Paulsen, Gary
As millions of readers of Hatchet, the River and Brian's Winter know, Brian Robeson survived alone in the wilderness by finding solutions to extraordinary challenges. But now that he's back in civilization, he can't find a way to make sense of high school life. He feels disconnected, more isolated than he did alone in the north woods. the answer is to return, to "go back in" for only in the wilderness can Brain discover his true path in life, and where he belongs.
Schools: 0
Paulsen, Gary
Schools: 0

Paulsen, Gary
After his experiences surviving alone in the Canadian wilderness, sixteen-year-old Brian finds it increasingly difficult to live as a normal high school student and begins planning to return to the place where he feels he really belongs.
Schools: 5
Paulsen, Gary
As millions of readers of Hatchet, the River and Brian's Winter know, Brian Robeson survived alone in the wilderness by finding solutions to extraordinary challenges. But now that he's back in civilization, he can't find a way to make sense of high school life. He feels disconnected, more isolated than he did alone in the north woods. the answer is to return, to "go back in" for only in the wilderness can Brain discover his true path in life, and where he belongs.
Schools: 1