Hatchet3
The book I am reading is called Hatchet. It is about Brian Robeson, whose parents are divorced. It starts off that he is flying to visit his father in the Canadian wilderness. His parents are divorced because his mom is seeing another man, and Brian's father doesn't know. He refers to this as the secret. This flight to see his father in the Canadian wilderness is Brian's first time in an airplane. He explains this to the pilot and tells him that he is scared. The pilot feels sorry for Brian and decides to show him that flying is not very difficult. He lets Brian take the steering control and direct the line of flight for awhile. Just when Brian thinks that everything is going well, the pilot has a heart attack and dies. Brian knows he must land the plane himself or die. He tries to use the radio, but it does not work. He knows that if he hits the trees, he will die, so he decides to land in the water of a lake. When the plane hits the water, he flys out through a window. He swims to the bank of the lake for awhile to rest. Brian knows he needs food and shelter to survive so he sets out to find both. He was very careful not to get lost or go too far from the lake where he crashed. He found a cherry tree and b
He was very proud of himself when he was able to use it to catch fish, or shoot a bird. It is this because Brian is struggling to survive in the wilderness, by himself. It was then, when the quills shot into his foot that he knew it was a porcupine. He needed to have one at the mouth of the cave to protect him from wild animals, and to signal for help. He filled his windbreaker with cherries to eat later and then managed to find a cave for shelter. It is that if you remain focused and calm, you can accomplish just about anything. He then went back to building the fire. He tried to use the radio, but he did not think it was working. I once had a paper due and I couldn't get the paper to print. He then swam in through the hole and pulled the pack out. He was becoming better all the time at survival. He was terrified, because the bear was only about 20 feet away eating his cherries out of his windbreaker. I can't relate to this story by surviving alone outside, but I can relate to it by the way he was calm and wasn't reckless.
Common topics in this essay:
Brian Robeson,
Instead Brian,
Book Report,
canadian wilderness,
father canadian,
emergency transmitter,
catch fish,
parents divorced,
father canadian wilderness,
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