Brian's Winter (Brian's Saga Series #3)

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Overview

In Hatchet, 13-year-old Brian Robeson learned to survive alone in the Canadian wilderness, armed only with his hatchet. He was rescued at the end of the summer. Brian's Winterbegins where Hatchet might have ended: Brian is not rescued, but must build on his survival skills to face his deadliest enemy—a northern winter.

Instead of being rescued from a plane crash, as in the author's book Hatchet, this story portrays what would have happened to Brian had he been forced to survive a winter in the wilderness with only his survival pack and hatchet.

Editorial Reviews

Publishers Weekly
First there was Hatchet, Paulsen's classic tale of a boy's survival in the north woods after a plane crash. Then came a sequel, The River, and, last year, Father Water, Mother Woods, a collection of autobiographical essays introduced as the nonfiction counterpart to Hatchet. Now Paulsen backs up and asks readers to imagine that Brian, the hero, hadn't been rescued after all. His many fans will be only too glad to comply, revisiting Brian at the onset of a punishing Canadian winter. The pace never relents-the story begins, as it were, in the middle, with Brian already toughened up and his reflexes primed for crisis. Paulsen serves up one cliffhanger after another (a marauding bear, a charging elk), and always there are the supreme challenges of obtaining food and protection against the cold. Authoritative narration makes it easy for readers to join Brian vicariously as he wields his hatchet to whittle arrows and arrowheads and a lance, hunts game, and devises clothes out of animal skins; while teasers at the ends of chapters keep the tension high (``He would hunt big tomorrow, he thought.... But as it happened he very nearly never hunted again''). The moral of the story: it pays to write your favorite author and ask for another helping. Ages 12-up. (Feb.)
Children's Literature
Gary Paulson strikes again in this what if… sequel to Hatchet. What if Brian was not rescued and had to survive through a Canadian winter? How would Brian keep warm, hunt, and keep a fire going when the woods were covered in snow? Paulson takes us step-by-step through Brian's thinking and realization that winter is coming. You can taste Brian's fear as the first frost hits, and Brian knows that he cannot ignore the signs anymore; winter will be upon him at any moment. Brian learned to insulate his shelter for the winter, create clothes to keep himself warm, and even figured out how to create stronger and fasters arrows so that he can hunt larger prey. Brian had good days and bad days as the winter progresses, whether it is the skunk attack or the fabulous feast of the moose that Brian was able to kill. Brian became more and more confident throughout the winter and would venture out farther and farther away from his shelter. On one of his trips, he sees sled tracks. Has he found his way out? Paulson, who personally has lived through rough winters, adds believable details that help the reader feel the cold and the fear. Read aloud by Richard Thomas, of Walton's fame, this story comes alive to the listener. Though, added musical accents can interrupt your involvement with the story, it is worth a listen. Reviewer: Caroline Goddard
The ALAN Review
This "alternative sequel" explores what might have happened had thirteen-year-old Brian Robeson not been rescued at the end of Paulsen's noted Hatchet and instead had to survive a frigid winter alone in the northern Canadian wilderness. In this book the cold is the primary enemy, and Brian again learns that survival depends upon first observing closely his environment and then living according to its laws. A veteran winter survivalist, Paulsen fills Brian's Winter with the same vivid details that made the earlier Hatchet and The River so believable. And here he adds an extra dimension: like Russell Suskit in Paulsen's Dogsong, Brian survives this time by returning to the "old ways" - fashioning flint arrowheads to hunt large game and even painting on cave walls to record important events. Finally, Paulsen has brought his lively humor to this work. His character Betty the skunk is certainly literature's most entertaining animal thief since E. B. White's Templeton! Lovers of Gary Paulsen's survival stories will love this work also. This is terrific outdoor adventure writing.
VOYA
Brian Robeson is stranded in the Canadian wilderness following the crash of a small plane which kills the pilot, the only other person aboard. After about two months, he is rescued. The riveting account of the teenager's struggle to survive was vivdly portrayed in Paulsen's Hatchet (Bradbury, 1987). Here is an alternative ending, in which Brian is not rescued at the end of the summer but instead is forced to spend the fall and part of a bitter winter in the woods. Adapting the skill he has already learned, Brian is able to fortify his cave shelter, find ways to kill larger game and protect himself against new dangers. As he ranges farther from his camp, he encounters a toboggan track that leads him to the home of a Cree family of trappers. Brian stays with the Cree family until their supply plane makes its scheduled stop, and he leaves the wilderness on the plane. This is more than a relating of Brian's adventures with bears, moose, blizzards and skunks. It is about animals and weather and survival, of course, but there is a beauty and a compelling depth to the writing. As Brian sometimes fails and sometimes succeeds, his characterization is consistent and believable. The descriptions of the wilderness and Brian's thoughts and interactions with all of his surroundings are woven into the narrative. There are a few references to incidents in Hatchet, but this story will stand alone. Pick either ending - a summer rescue or a winter rescue-and you have a great adventure story. VOYA Codes: 5Q 5P M J S (Hard to imagine it being any better written, Every YA (who reads) was dying to read it yesterday, Middle School-defined as grades 6 to 8, Junior High-defined as grades 7 to 9 and Senior High-defined as grades 10 to 12).
Children's Literature
Gary Paulsen's Hatchet is one of the most successful books for young adult readers, reluctant or otherwise. It's a gripping story of survival that leaves a young boy to fend for himself in the northern Wilderness. In response to two hundred letters a week from children begging for sequel, he wrote Brian's Winter. The sequel begins with the assumption that the boy was not rescued at the end of the summer, as he was in Hatchet, and now must struggle to survive the approaching winter. There is a whole different set of concerns; Brian's shelter must be winterized, his clothing made warmer, and his hunting kills larger to sustain bitter weather. Changing the end of one book to allow for a sequel is tricky, but Paulsen's book succeeds. Brian, while consistent in character, evolves in survival skills. Paulsen adds new conflicts, but his writing is still gripping. All these justify the new ending, but the best justification is that this book will please his fans.
School Library Journal
Gr 5-9-At the conclusion of Hatchet (Macmillan, 1987), Brian Robeson is rescued after surviving a plane crash and summer alone in the north Canadian woods. Now, in this second sequel, Paulsen shows what would have happened if the 13-year-old boy had been forced to endure the harsh winter. For a brief time, Brian lives in relative luxury, living off the contents of the recently recovered survival pack, which included a gun for hunting. Then, his freeze-dried food runs out and his rifle fails, and he realizes how careless and complacent he has become. Suddenly aware of the changing seasons, he works frantically to winterize his shelter, fashion warmer clothes from animal skins, and construct a more powerful bow and arrow. About the time he has mastered winter survival, he discovers a dog-sled trail that leads him to a trapper and final rescue. The same formula that worked before is successful here: the driving pace of the narration, the breathtaking descriptions of nature, and the boy who triumphs on the merits of efficient problem solving. The author's ability to cast a spell, mesmerize his audience, and provide a clinic in winter survival is reason enough to buy this novel. Although the plot is both familiar and predictable, Paulsen fans will not be disappointed.Tim Rausch, Crescent View Middle School, Sandy, UT
Hazel Rochman
Writing with simplicity, Paulsen is at his best in an elemental story of wilderness survival. In this sequel to his widely popular "Hatchet" (1987), he spells out an alternative ending many readers have tried to imagine: What if 13-year-old Brian hadn't been rescued before winter came? What if he had had to face the cold months alone in the Canadian north? This time Brian has a survival kit he found in the crashed plane (including two butane lighters, a rifle, a fishing line, and a sleeping bag), but otherwise he has to find food, shelter, and clothing from the world around him. He sees himself like the first Americans, learning to make arrowheads and snowshoes, getting to know the sounds and tracks and weather of his place in the wild. Of course, Brian is extraordinarily resourceful and inventive. What's more, he somehow recovers from everything without injury, even after being knocked unconscious by a 700-pound moose. There's no suspense; we know he'll make it. Yet, as in the autobiographical "Woodsong" (1990), Paulsen writes with the authoritative particularity of someone who knows the woods. This docunovel is for outdoors lovers and also for all of those adventurers snug at home in a centrally heated high-rise. The facts are the drama.
Advocates Voice of Youth
"There is a beauty and a compelling depth to the writing. As Brian sometimes fails and sometimes succeeds, his characteristizationis consistent and believable."

Product Details

  • ISBN-13: 9780385321983
  • Publisher: Random House Children's Books
  • Publication date: 1/28/1996
  • Pages: 144
  • Sales rank: 205,322
  • Age range: 10 - 14 Years
  • Lexile: 1140L (what's this?)
  • Series: Brian's Saga Series , #3
  • Product dimensions: 5.90 (w) x 8.51 (h) x 0.62 (d)

Meet the Author

Gary Paulsen
Gary Paulsen

GARY PAULSEN is the distinguished author of many critically acclaimed books for young people. His most recent books are Flat Broke; Liar, Liar; Masters of Disaster; Lawn Boy Returns; Woods Runner; Notes from the Dog; Mudshark; Lawn Boy; Molly McGinty Has a Really Good Day; The Time Hackers; and The Amazing Life of Birds (The Twenty Day Puberty Journal of Duane Homer Leech).

Read an Excerpt

For two weeks the weather grew warmer and each day was more glorious than the one before. Hunting seemed to get better as well. Brian took foolbirds or rabbits every day and on one single day he took three foolbirds.

He ate everything and felt fat and lazy and one afternoon he actually lay in the sun. It was perhaps wrong to say he was happy. He spent too much time in loneliness for true happiness. But he found himself smiling as he worked around the camp and actually looked forward to bringing in wood in the soft afternoons just because it kept him out rummaging around in the woods.

He had made many friends—or at least acquaintances. Birds had taken on a special significance for him. At night the owls made their soft sounds, calling each other in almost ghostly hooonnes that scared him until he finally saw one call on a night when the moon was full and so bright it was almost like a cloudy day. He slept with their calls and before long would awaken if they didn't call.

Before dawn, just as gray light began to filter through the trees, the day birds began to sing. They started slowly but before the gray had become light enough to see ten yards all the birds started to sing and Brian was brought out of sleep by what seemed to be thousands of singing birds.

At first it all seemed to be noise but as he learned and listened, he found them all to be different. Robins had an evening song and one they sang right before a rainstorm and another when the rain was done. Blue jays spent all their time complaining and swearing but they also warned him when something—anything—was moving in the woods. Ravens and crows were the same—scrawking and cawing their way through the trees.

It was all, Brian found, about territory. Everybody wanted to own a place to live, a place to hunt. Birds didn't sing for fun, they sang to warn other birds to keep away—sang to tell them to stay out of their territory.

He had learned about property from the wolves. Several times he had seen a solitary wolf—a large male that came near the camp and studied the boy. The wolf did not seem to be afraid and did nothing to frighten Brian, and Brian even thought of him as a kind of friend.

The wolf seemed to come on a regular schedule, hunting, and Brian guessed that he ran a kind of circuit. At night while gazing at the fire Brian figured that if the wolf made five miles an hour and hunted ten hours a day, he must be traveling close to a hundred-mile loop.

After a month or so the wolf brought a friend, a smaller, younger male, and the second time they both came they stopped near Brian's camp and while Brian watched they peed on a rotten stump, both going twice on the same spot.

Brian had read about wolves and seen films about them: and knew that they "left sign," using urine to mark their territory. He had also read—he thought in a book by Farley Mowat—that the wolves respected others' territories as well as their own. As soon as they were well away from the old stump Brian went up and peed where they had left sign.

Five days later when they came through again Brian saw them stop, smell where he had gone and then spot the ground next to Brian's spot, accepting his boundary.

Good, he thought. I own something now. I belong. And he had gone on with his life believing that the wolves and he had settled everything.

But wolf rules and Brian rules only applied to wolves and Brian.

Then the bear came.

Brian had come to know bears as well as he knew wolves or birds. They were usually alone—unless it was a female with cubs—and they were absolutely, totally devoted to eating. He had seen them several times while picking berries, raking the bushes with their teeth to pull the fruit off—and a goodly number of leaves as well, which they spit out before swallowing the berries—and, as with the wolves, they seemed to get along with him.

That is to say Brian would see them eating and he would move away and let them pick where they wanted while he found another location. It worked for the bears, he thought, smiling, and it worked for him, and this thinking evolved into what Brian thought of as an understanding between him and the bears: Since he left them alone, they would leave him alone.

Unfortunately the bears did not know that it was an agreement, and Brian was suffering under the misunderstanding that, as in some imaginary politically correct society, everything was working out.

All of this made him totally unprepared for the reality of the woods. To wit: Bears and wolves did what they wanted to do, and Brian had to fit in.

He was literary awakened to the facts one morning during the two-week warm spell. Brian had been sleeping soundly and woke to the clunking sound of metal on rock. His mind and ears were tuned to all the natural sounds around him and there was no sound in nature of metal on stone. It snapped him awake in midbreath.

He was sleeping with his head in the opening of the shelter and he had his face out and when he opened his eyes he saw what appeared to be a wall of black-brown fur directly in front of him.

He thought he might be dreaming and shook his head but it didn't go away and he realized in the same moment that he was looking at the rear end of a bear. No, he thought with a clinical logic that surprised him—I am looking at the very large rear end of a very large bear.

The bear had come to Brian's camp—smelling the gutsmell of the dead rabbit, and the cooking odor from the pot. The bear did not see it as Brian's camp or territory. There was a food smell, it was hungry, it was time to eat.

It had found the pot and knife by the fire where Brian had left them and scooped them outside. Brian had washed them both in the lake when he finished eating, but the smell of food was still in the air. Working around the side of the opening, the bear had bumped the pan against a rock at the same moment that it had settled its rump in the entrance of Brian's shelter.

Brian pulled back a foot. "Hey—get out of there!" he yelled, and kicked the bear in the rear.

He was not certain what he expected. Perhaps that the bear would turn and realize its mistake and then sheepishly trundle away. Or that the bear would just run off.

With no hesitation, not even the smallest part of a second's delay, the bear turned and ripped the entire log side off the shelter with one sweep of a front paw and a moist "whouuuff" out of its nostrils.

Brian found himself looking up at the bear, turned now to look down on the boy, and with another snort the bear swung its left paw again and scooped Brian out of the hollow of the rock and flung him end over end for twenty feet. Then the bear slipped forward and used both front paws to pack Brian in a kind of ball and whap him down to the edge of the water, where he lay, dazed, thinking in some way that he was still back in the shelter.

The bear stopped and studied Brian for a long minute, then turned back to ransacking the camp, looking for where that delicious smell had come from. It sat back on its haunches and felt the air with its nostrils, located another faint odor stream and followed it down to the edge of the water where the fish pool lay. It dug in the water—not more than ten feet from where Brian now lay, trying to figure out if his arms and legs were still all attached to where they had been before—and pulled up the rabbit skull, still with bits of meat on it, and swallowed it whole. It dug around in the water again and found the guts and ate them and went back to rummaging around in the pool, and when nothing more could be found the bear looked once more at Brian, at the camp, and then walked away without looking back.

Other than some minor scratches where the bear's claws had slightly scraped him—it was more a boxing action than a clawing one—Brian was in one piece. He was still jolted and confused about just exactly which end was up, but most of all he was grateful.

He knew that the bear could have done much more damage than it had. He had seen a bear tear a stump out of the ground like a giant tooth when it was looking for grubworms and ants. This bear could just as easily have killed him, and had actually held back.

But as the day progressed Brian found himself stiffening, and by the time he was ready for bed his whole body ached and he knew he would be covered with bruises from the encounter.

He would have to find some way to protect himself, some weapon. The fire worked well when it was burning, but it had burned down. His hatchet and knife would have done nothing more than make the bear really angry—something he did not like to think about—and his bow was good only for smaller game. He had never tried to shoot anything bigger than a foolbird or rabbit with it and doubted that the bow would push the arrow deep enough to do anything but—again—make the bear really mad.

He bundled in his bag that night, the end of the two weeks of warm weather. He kept putting wood on the fire, half afraid the bear would come back. All the while he tried to think of a solution.

But in reality, the bear was not his primary adversary. Nor was the wolf, nor any animal. Brian had become his own worst enemy because in all the business of hunting, fishing and surviving he had forgotten the primary rule: Always, always pay attention to what was happening. Everything in nature means something and he had missed the warnings that summer was ending, had in many ways already ended, and what was coming would be the most dangerous thing he had faced since the plane crash.

An Excerpt from Brian's Winter

        He would have to find some way to protect himself, some weapon. The fire
        worked well when it was burning, but it had burned down. His hatchet and
        knife would have done nothing more than make the bear really angry—something
        he did not like to think about—and his bow was good only for smaller
        game. He had never tried to shoot anything bigger than a foolbird or rabbit
        with it and doubted that the bow would push the arrow deep enough to do
        anything but—again—make the bear really mad.

        He bundled in his bag that night, the end of the two weeks of warm weather.
        He kept putting wood on the fire, half afraid the bear would come back.
        All the while he tried to think of a solution.

        But in reality, the bear was not his primary adversary. Nor was the wolf,
        nor any animal. Brian had become his own worst enemy because in all the
        business of hunting, fishing and surviving he had forgotten the primary
        rule: Always, always pay attention to what was happening. Everything
        in nature means something and he had missed the warnings that summer was
        ending, had in many ways already ended, and what was coming would be the
        most dangerous thing he had faced since the plane crash.

    

Table of Contents

Customer Reviews

Average Rating 4.5
( 220 )

Rating Distribution

5 Star

(140)

4 Star

(57)

3 Star

(9)

2 Star

(5)

1 Star

(9)

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See All Sort by: Showing 1 – 20 of 220 Customer Reviews
  • Anonymous

    Posted January 23, 2012

    Amazing

    Gary Paulson has yet again shown amazing story skills! I have read Hatchet and I loved, so much I finished both these books in one day each!

    3 out of 4 people found this review helpful.

    Was this review helpful? Yes  No   Report this review
  • Posted January 6, 2010

    more from this reviewer

    Another Great Brians saga book!

    The first book hatchet is in my opinion, the best book in the brians saga series. This book starts off where the first book ends. Its an alternative ending book and its worth reading. I would say hatchet is the best in the series and this is the second best. Its all about a boys survival in the winter with pretty much the basics. This book and hatchet are pretty "thrilling" (for a lack of better words), while the rest of the books in this series are good but pretty low key and laid back for the most part.

    Great books for younger outdoors kids that like to camp, hunt and fish.

    Please read my review of the first book hatchet.

    3 out of 4 people found this review helpful.

    Was this review helpful? Yes  No   Report this review
  • Anonymous

    Posted January 17, 2012

    Great book!!!

    Gary Paulsen does it again with yet another book that is absolutely hard to put down! I would like to see these books being made into a movie!

    2 out of 4 people found this review helpful.

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  • Anonymous

    Posted October 15, 2009

    Whoa I loved this book

    Brian's winter is an excellent book. If you like outdoors or just like adventurous books this is the one for you. It starts out with a boy named Brian flying to Canada to visit his dad. When his pilot had a heart attack and the plane crashed. The pilot was dead but Brian survived. He took the the survival pack from the plane and started to make a shelter. The pack had a gun, fishing pole, foam pad, and a sleeping bag. He started fishing, hunting and fixing his shelter. One day his gun broke. So he started making a bow out of fishing line and a firm stick. It was now almost winter and his shelter was not winter proof yet. So he took mud from the lake and packs a rock with it. He then rolled it in the opened end of the shelter. It was now winter and the shelter was winter proof. He continued to make bows and hunt for small animals. One day he was out walking when he approached a moose. Then he held his hatchet in front of him and the moose dropped on top of him. He was sore for a couple of days. But he had plenty of meat. He was walking buy the lake one day and found some toboggan tracks he followed them. He came to a family of trappers. He stayed with them for a couple of weeks. When the supply plane came back he rode back with him.

    2 out of 4 people found this review helpful.

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  • Posted September 13, 2011

    I Also Recommend:

    must read

    this book is amazing. hard to put down, Can't wait to read the next.

    1 out of 4 people found this review helpful.

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  • Anonymous

    Posted May 4, 2012

    Brian's Winter

    Its a great book. The book is very interesting. It pulls you in the story. Gary Paulsen is the one of the best authors ever. So is Suzzanne Collins. Lil' Ms.$wag wrote this.

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  • Anonymous

    Posted April 26, 2012

    Best book ever

    Very good

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  • Posted April 23, 2012

    In this book, Brian's Winter, Gary Paulsen describes Briain

    In this book, Brian's Winter, Gary Paulsen describes Briain's survival in detail.I would absolutely recommend this book to anyone that loves the outdoors and love Gary Paulsen's books. The book starts where where Hatchet left off. He is also back in the Canadian wilderness. the items that brian is living off of is a .22 hunting rifle, sleeping bag, foam pad, fishing line, fishing pole, beef jerky, and other supplies.As brian is mainly living off of foolbird and rabbit, one day when he was hunting with his .22 the firing pin broke as he was about to kill a rabbit. As he went to camp he gets his bow and arrow and does some practice on a stump. After getting his food off of his bow, he realizes that winter is coming and almost alll the animal are hibernating. One night when Brian took fish to eat out of his pool, he left the guts out. The next morning a big grizzly bear is right at his feet. Brian, barely gets out alive. The bear is on a rampage for food and then destroys his camp.
    Brian starts to make his bow by first finding a big and sturdy branch as the bow . He then strings it with the line he has. Then he finds small, thin branches for his arrow shaft. Next, he has to make arrowheads. He first thought on how the Indians made thiers: by flaking off rock to make it sharp. And that is what he did. Brian thought on how he would manage to tie the arrow heads on and all of his rabbit hides were dry, except one that got wet from the rain. He then found a way to tie the arrow heads.The next thing to do is put the feather on the end of the arrows.
    Brian next one mornng seen two different wolves both have big slabs of meat in their mouths and fresh blood all over their faces. When they came he marked his territory( by peeing on a stump) they left. As they left he followed their tracks and eventually came upon a fresh deer kill. He looked on how they took down the young doe. He then quickly drug the deer to his camp.
    One day as Brian was walking out he noticed a big moose. He was walking around for food it started to run at him at as it was Brian put his hatchet in front of him. As tyhe moose kept running it ran into the hatchet killing the moose. As he got it to his camp he had plenty to eat for awhile.
    After awhile as Brian was near the lake he noticed tabogan tracks, and when he reached the end of them he found a log cabin that belonged to a trapping family. They let him stay awhile. Then eventually a supply heliocopter came and he went with the heliocopter.

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  • Anonymous

    Posted April 17, 2012

    A good book

    Best book ever also a great author

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  • Anonymous

    Posted March 10, 2012

    1of my fave books

    This book is great but hatchet was the best so far. I wish that Gary would write more of this series than like just 6 books

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  • Anonymous

    Posted March 3, 2012

    Best book ever!!

    This book is so awesome! Its way better than the 1st or the 2nd books in the series.

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  • Anonymous

    Posted February 23, 2012

    Fheje

    Fhjw

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  • Anonymous

    Posted February 18, 2012

    brians winter

    wonderful book......worth the money

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  • Anonymous

    Posted February 15, 2012

    Dont get

    Tells same story as the last two books

    0 out of 1 people found this review helpful.

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  • Anonymous

    Posted January 20, 2012

    Y

    Great book

    0 out of 1 people found this review helpful.

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  • Anonymous

    Posted January 17, 2012

    Love you Gary!!!

    Read it in school best book ever !!!!!!

    0 out of 1 people found this review helpful.

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  • Anonymous

    Posted January 17, 2012

    Brian's Winter

    I love this book so much. Mrs. Castro recommend it to me. Im glad she did! It is the best Gary Paulsen book for after hachet!

    0 out of 2 people found this review helpful.

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  • Anonymous

    Posted January 3, 2012

    Great book little bit gory

    An asome book a great 3rd book but it should be the 2

    0 out of 1 people found this review helpful.

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  • Anonymous

    Posted January 1, 2012

    Brians winter

    This book is suspenceful .

    0 out of 1 people found this review helpful.

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  • Anonymous

    Posted December 21, 2011

    Awesome book

    So good i cant explain

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