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Free Study Guide for Hatchet by Gary Paulsen Downloadable / Printable Version FREE NOTES HATCHET BY GARY PAULSEN BOOK SUMMARY
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Later that night, Brian is awakened by a low, roaring sound from the wind. The mystery sound turns out to be a tornado, and it is too late for Brian to do anything. It is the same insanity as the moose. He is whipped against the front wall of the shelter like a rag doll, ripping a new pain into his already damaged ribs. Then, he is hammered into the sand while the wind picks up everything in his shelter and the shelter as well and throws it all into the lake. He holds onto the rock wall, praying that he survives this newest danger of the wilderness. Eventually, the wind moves into the lake, and Brian realizes he’s back to nothing, just the same as he was after the crash. All he has left is the hatchet on his belt. He thinks, “A flip of some giant coin and I am the loser.”
Soon, Brian comes to remember, however, that he is different now. He may have been hit, but he’s not down, because he knows how to rebuild what he has lost and he still has the hatchet which is all he had in the first place. Before he falls asleep, he thinks that there is something else new - a cold snap - driving the mosquitoes back into the grass. His last thought is that he hopes the tornado hit the moose.
In the morning, Brian leaves the overhanging ledge to see if he can
salvage anything from the storm. He finds his bow, broken but with the
precious string still intact. He looks down the shoreline for anything
else when he suddenly sees it - the tail of the plane. The tornado had
somehow, when crossing the lake, changed the position of the plane and
raised the tail. It makes him think again of the pilot, and he now feels
a massive sadness and wants to say something appropriate even though he
doesn’t know the right religious words. He ends up just saying, “Have
rest. Have rest forever.”
In this chapter, Brian is hit with two major dangers and survives - the moose and the tornado. This is reinforcement for the fact that life in the wilderness can change at any moment, and even though he has matured and learned, he is not exempt from the whims of nature. The difference, however, is a big one: he knows now how to rebuild. He also has changed in that he finally has a realization of the sadness of the pilot’s death and forgets himself for a moment to pray for the man who had died on the plane.
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