Brian's Return (Brian's Saga Series #4)

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First Good [ No Hassle 30 Day Returns ] Publisher: Delacorte Books for Young Readers Pub Date: 1/12/1999 Binding: Hardcover Pages: 128.

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Overview

For more than a decade, readers and reviewers everywhere have praised Gary Paulsen's exciting stories about brave Brian Robeson. In the Newbery Honor book Hatchet, 13-year-old Brian was stranded in the Canadian wilderness with only the clothes on his back and a hatchet to help him survive. The River brought 15-year-old Brian back to the wilderness for a government project -- where he was left with a wounded partner and a rapid river to navigate. An alternative sequel, Brian's Winter, posed the question: What if Brian had not been rescued? Now comes Brian's Return -- the final, gripping conclusion to Paulsen's extraordinary saga.

After having survived alone in the wilderness, Brian finds that he can no longer live in the city but must return to the place where he really belongs.

Editorial Reviews

KLIATT
To quote KLIATT's Nov. 1998 review of the hardcover edition: In this conclusion to the story that began with the classic survival tale Hatchet and continued in The River and Brian's Winter, Brian Robeson has returned to civilization—and he hates it. Back home and in high school, he tries to fit in, but the noise and the lack of solitude trouble him, and he misses the woods desperately...Brain makes a careful list of what he needs to bring with him to survive alone in the north woods, from a canoe to the right kind of arrowheads—and the complete works of Shakespeare. But nature is unpredictable, as Brian is reminded when a deer leaps into his canoe and capsizes it, a storm collapses his tent, and he pokes his leg with an arrow. The beauty and joy of being in the wild help Brian rise above the challenges he faces, and an encounter with a stranger reaffirms his dedication to life in the woods...In spare and evocative prose, the novel conveys his love of the wild. Readers will be intrigued by Brain's list and his survival skills, and enjoy his adventures, though they are not quite as dramatic as those in the other novels. This quick read will appeal to reluctant readers as well as to the many fans of Hatchet and its sequels. KLIATT Codes: J*—Exceptional book, recommended for junior high school students. 1999, Random House, Dell Laurel-Leaf, 120p. 18cm., $5.50. Ages 13 to 15. Reviewer: Paula Rohrlick; KLIATT , July 2001 (Vol. 35, No. 4)
From The Critics
It has been two years since the small plane crashed in the wilderness and Brian is now nearly sixteen. No matter how hard he tries, he does not fit into today's fast-paced world. He longs for the solitude of the northern lakes and woods. After a vicious fight with a high school football player, Brian is sent to a counselor to work out his problems. Brian just wants to go back home to the woods. Paulsen spends sixty pages of this novel preparing Brian for his trip back to the northern wilderness. The reader learns in great detail about specific types of bows and arrows, as well as other camping/survival equipment. With a canoe and his bow and arrows, Brian blends back into the woods and waterways he loves so much. An encounter with a bear and a torrential rainstorm only remind him that one must prepare for the unexpected in the wilderness. Also unexpected is the arrival of the old woodsman, Billy. When Brian tells Billy about the deer he saw that day, and how it looked directly at him, Billy says that it is Brian's "medicine deer" and he must listen to what the deer tells him. In the morning Brian finds a rawhide loop with a bit of whitetail deer tail and a crow feather tied to it-medicine to guide him. Brian dips his paddle into the water and as his canoe silently glides through the pristine wilderness he knows that he will follow his medicine, wherever it will take him. Paulsen fans will love this final chapter in Brian's quest for the woodsman's way of life. The author's note explains that the things that happen to Brian in the four novels-Hatchet (Simon & Schuster, 1987/VOYA February 1988), The River (Delacorte, 1991/VOYA August 1991), Brian's Winter (Delacorte, 1996/VOYA February 1997), and Brian's Return-have happened to Paulsen during his life-long romance with the wilderness. VOYA Codes: 3Q 4P M (Readable without serious defects, Broad general YA appeal, Middle School-defined as grades 6 to 8).

Product Details

  • ISBN-13: 9780385325004
  • Publisher: Random House Children's Books
  • Publication date: 1/28/1999
  • Pages: 128
  • Sales rank: 257,920
  • Age range: 10 - 14 Years
  • Lexile: 1030L (what's this?)
  • Series: Brian's Saga Series, #4
  • Product dimensions: 6.07 (w) x 8.53 (h) x 0.76 (d)

Meet the Author

Gary Paulsen
Gary Paulsen

Gary Paulsen is one of the most honored writers of contemporary literature for young readers. He has written more than one hundred book for adults and young readers, and is the author of three Newbery Honor titles: Dogsong, Hatchet, and The Winter Room. He divides his time among Alaska, New Mexico, Minnesota, and the Pacific.

Read an Excerpt

Brian sat quietly, taken by a peace he had not known for a long time, and let the canoe drift forward along the lily pads. To his right was the shoreline of a small lake he had flown into an hour earlier. Around him was the lake itself, an almost circular body of water of approximately eighty acres surrounded by northern forest—pine, spruce, poplar and birch—and thick brush.

It was late spring—June 3, to be exact—and the lake was teeming, crawling, buzzing and flying with life. Mosquitos and flies filled the air, swarming on him, and he smiled now, remembering his first horror at the small blood drinkers. In the middle of the canoe he had an old coffee can with some kindling inside it, and a bit of birchbark, and he lit them and dropped a handful of green poplar leaves on the tiny fire. Soon smoke billowed out and drifted back and forth across the canoe and the insects left him. He had repellant with him this time—along with nearly two hundred pounds of other gear—but he hated the smell of it and found it didn't work as well as a touch of smoke now and then. The blackflies and deerflies and horseflies ignored repellant completely—he swore they seemed to lick it off—but they hated the smoke and stayed well off the canoe.

The relief gave him time to see the rest of the activity on the lake. He remained still, watching, listening.

To his left rear he heard a beaver slap the water with its tail and dive—a warning at the intruder, at the strange smoking log holding the person. Brian smiled. He had come to know beaver for what they truly were—engineers, family-oriented home builders. He'd read that most of the cities in Europe were founded by beaver. That beaver had first felled the trees along the rivers and dammed them up. The rising water killed more trees and when the food was gone and the beaver had no more bark to chew they left. The dams eventually broke apart, and the water drained and left large clearings along the rivers where the beaver had cut down all the trees. Early man came along and started cities where the clearings lay.
Cities like London and Paris were founded and settled first by beaver.

In front and to the right he heard the heavier footsteps of a deer moving through the hazel brush. Probably a buck because he heard no smaller footsteps of a fawn. A buck with its antlers in velvet, more than likely, moving away from the smell of smoke from the canoe.

A frog jumped from a lily pad six feet away and had barely entered the water when a northern pike took it with a slashing strike that tore the surface of the lake and flipped lily pads over to show their pale undersides.

Somewhere a hawk screeeeeennned, and he looked for it but could not see it through the leaves of the trees around the lake. It would be hunting. Bringing home mice for a nest full of young. Looking for something to kill.

No, Brian thought—not in that way. The hawk did not hunt to kill. It hunted to eat. Of course it had to kill to eat—along with all other carnivorous animals—but the killing was the means to bring food, not the end. Only man hunted for sport, or for trophies.

It is the same with me as with the hawk, Brian felt. He turned the paddle edgeways, eased it forward silently and pulled back with an even stroke. I will kill to eat, or to defend myself. But for no other reason.

In the past two years, except for the time with Derek on the river, in a kind of lonely agony he had tried to find things to read or watch that brought the woods to him. He missed the forest, the lakes, the wild as he thought of it, so much that at times he could not bear it. The guns-and-hunting magazines, the hunting and fishing videos on television sickened him. Men using high-velocity weapons to shoot deer or elk from so far away they could barely see them, or worse, blasting them from a blind or the back of a Jeep; baiting bear with pits full of rotten meat and shooting them with rifles that could stop a car; taking bass for sport or money in huge contests with fancy boats and electronic gear that located each fish individually.

Sport, they called it. But they weren't hunting or fishing because they needed to; they were killing to kill, not eat, to prove some kind of worth, and he stopped reading the magazines and watching the videos. His survival in the wilderness had made him famous, in a small way, and some of the magazines interviewed him, as did some of the hunting and sporting shows on television, but they got it all wrong. Completely wrong.

"Boy conquers savage wilderness!" some magazines said in the blurbs on the covers. "Learns to beat nature . . ."

It wasn't that way. Had never been that way. Brian hadn't conquered anything. Nature had whipped him, not the other way around; had beaten him down and pounded the stupidity out of his brain until he had been forced to bend, forced to give, forced to learn to survive. He had learned the most important fact of all, and the one that is so hard for many to understand or believe: Man proposes, nature disposes. He hadn't conquered nature at all—he had become part of it. And it had become part of him, maybe all of him.

And that, he thought as the canoe slid gently forward, had been exactly the problem.

Table of Contents

Customer Reviews
Average Rating 4
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  • Posted September 13, 2011

    I Also Recommend:

    Loved it

    I love this series. from all the books, this is the best. Can't wait to read the next.

    3 out of 3 people found this review helpful.

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  • Anonymous

    Posted May 2, 2011

    Great book

    In the woods, completely alone with no house or electricity is Brian Robinson. In Brian's Return, Brian is a believable character that you will get attached to when you read. Brian develops as the story goes along. This book is in a nature wonderland in present day Canada. Brian couldn't handle the city life in New York City so he moved back into the Canadian woods for another epic adventure. The story has little dialog but Brian has conversations with himself. This book has some suspense and the atmosphere is quiet and full of beauty. This great book will leave you wanting to know more about Brian and his adventures in the woods.

    3 out of 3 people found this review helpful.

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  • Anonymous

    Posted January 5, 2000

    Back To The Woods With Brian

    The book that I read was Brians Return. I thought that this was a very good book becauseit is adventurous and exciting. Here is a short description of the book, Brian gets rescued from thge woods 2 years ago and is brought to the city and he doesn't like it there. So he starts to plan and buy equipment like a bow for hunting and a canoe to travel in. So he gets flown out to a chain of lakes and he canoes up them, some interesting things happen to him like a deer jumping off of land into his canoe but thats all that I am going to tell you so I don't ruin the story. It is a pretty good book so I will have to give it a four star rating.

    2 out of 2 people found this review helpful.

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  • Posted April 10, 2011

    good

    it was very good but some parts of the book eere a little boring

    1 out of 1 people found this review helpful.

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  • Posted February 15, 2011

    Brians return

    a great book!!!!!!

    1 out of 1 people found this review helpful.

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  • Anonymous

    Posted January 20, 2012

    Hatchet

    Best book

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  • Anonymous

    Posted January 17, 2012

    Great book writer

    Gary palsen made my favorite book that i cant stop reading
    Hachet

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  • Anonymous

    Posted December 24, 2011

    Little Short

    The book was good but sorta short

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  • Anonymous

    Posted December 17, 2011

    Written by blank

    It was a good book but not the best.

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  • Anonymous

    Posted December 1, 2011

    cool

    Hey this girl is really cute

    0 out of 1 people found this review helpful.

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  • Anonymous

    Posted November 28, 2011

    OK

    I like the others better but a good book

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  • Anonymous

    Posted October 26, 2011

    Poopie

    Jk i love this book

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  • Posted July 24, 2011

    Hachet

    He is back and thinking about his shelter

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  • Posted May 24, 2010

    I Also Recommend:

    brians return is the best thing ive ever read i am 13 myself and i love this book, it makes me want to survive in the wild like brian. this is a spell binding book including amazing literature as this 15 year old boy battles the wilderness again.rad.

    this book has soo many details in the amazing stories before brian's winters time. and i cant wait to read brians hunt because these books are just amazing to a boy who is 13 just like me to battle the wilderness with just a hatchet and with a right state of mind. this book is spellbinding as in the book " beats the hell out of the foot ball player" the detail was enormouse in the suspense of the pummling of the bullies face and him striking every blow. this man i think should diserve 1,000 awards for these books. when i got hooked on the hatchet i just kept reading i even got in trouble reading these books. this book made me realize how hard it would be just to survive 54 days in the wilderness on nothing but rasberries and fish for a month and a half. this book has moved me in so many ways and i hope involves other people to and binds them in these ways i have felt to. scincerly joseph manz.

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  • Posted February 16, 2010

    more from this reviewer

    Gary Paulsen does it again

    Of course those of you who read The River knew Paulsen would write this book. He had to write it. How else was Brian going to test out that great Canoe named "The Raft" which Derek sent him. As Brian was on the plane, flying back to the wild, an old man sat next to him and said (great quote) "well, you can take the man out of the woods, but you can't take the woods out of the man." In that environment, your mind, your soul finds peace. Brian just HAD to get back to the woods again to find that sense of peace.

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  • Posted January 6, 2010

    more from this reviewer

    Another good Brians Saga book.

    Brians return is not as good as the first book in this series "hatchet" But it was still a good read. Not quite at thrilling though. Please read my review of the first book "hatchet"

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  • Posted September 14, 2009

    I Also Recommend:

    This is a great book

    I got this book for a summer reading project and loved it. It's about a boy who goes back to the wilderness after trying to get back to normal after being in a plane crash. He buys all his supplies and goes back into the cannadian wilderness and wants to get to his freinds who have a camp a hundred miles away.

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  • Anonymous

    Posted January 7, 2009

    Brian's return book review

    I had many thoughts about the book. I thought that Brian¿s Return was very well put together. Every chapter had so much detail that you could get such a good mental image. Those were some good thoughts about the book. I think that the ending wasn't so good because it never really had an ending. It only says that Brian "follows his medicine" and to me that really doesn't say much. I would like to know what happens to Brian when he grows up and how does him leaving the city and living in the woods affect his family. I think the lesson of the book is if you have a compassion or love for something you can never really give it up. It¿s saying that you will always love to do what you like to do. Over all, I think the book is very good.

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  • Anonymous

    Posted May 19, 2008

    Brians Return

    Brian¿s Return is written by Gary Paulsen. I believe the author¿s purpose for writing this is to show people what your life would be like to run away, or if you had to survive out in the wilderness. I think that the author is trying to get the attention of the reader. The author has Brian telling the story. I think the author is trying to compare this to real life by showing what it would be like to run away from home. I could connect to Brian in the story because I and a lot of people have thought about running away. I think that the author was successful in writing this story because I learned what the author wanted me to see. This book compares to the movie lost because the people were lost on an island and so is Brian. The significant thing about the books title is that Brian did go back to the island. I would recommend this book to someone that is thinking about running away because they will realize not to run away. I agreed with the author and I liked the book it was interesting. I felt that the ending ended too soon because I hoped it would have went on longer. I rate this book a four, because the author had some good ideas.

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  • Anonymous

    Posted March 13, 2008

    Read!

    If you've read Hatchet and Brian's Winter the book Brian's Return is awesome. The book is filled with funny,cool,and exciting things. Everyone I know loves the book. Brian's Return is about Brian returning to the Canadian woods he was once lost. This time, Brian has come prepared with bows, a tent, a canoe, and so many other things needed to survive. While there, he runs in to some problems. One day he was canoing, and all of the sudden a deer jumped into the canoe and flipped Brian over. This made him pick a campsite and let every thing dry. One of the things that amazed me the most was that everyday Brian would learn more about the woods. He would become one with the woods. Brian thought he was one with the woods until he met this man he made Brian realize what one with the woods means and what life means. This book would be great for anyone who likes adventure and excitement. This book would also be great for anyone who likes nature.

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