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Northwind

por Gary Paulsen

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1496183,108 (3.82)1
When sickness decimates his fishing village, an orphan named Leif flees north in a cedar canoe, journeying along a brutal but beautiful coastline.
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Gr 4–8—An orphan named Leif finds himself alone in a canoe fleeing northward along a rugged and untamed
shoreline to escape a deadly plague, discovering a deep connection with the wilderness along the way. Readers will
be swept away by the beauty of Paulsen's final gift, which is so much more than a survival story.
  BackstoryBooks | Apr 1, 2024 |
Gary Paulsen delivers once again. This survival tale is set on the water and a world that is clearly reminiscent of the northwest. Leif, an orphan finds himself alone after a cholera outbreak. As Leif heads north, he begins his journey disoriented, but as the travels and encounters orcas, bears, and other challenges he develops a sense of purpose and learns about himself through keen natural observation. Paulsen's last novel is less grounded than his classic Hatchet, but he does give the readers a sense of the magic and wonder of the landscape (Leif is often amazed by his surroundings) and some of his own approach to life.

The author's note is wonderful - Paulsen talks directly to his younger readers and treats them with respect. ( )
  AnnesLibrary | Jan 28, 2024 |
I really enjoy Paulsen's writing and his stories; and even though I am not the target demographic, I am always able to glean a lesson from him. I didn't realize until I started reading it that this was his last book before he died - a disappointing loss for readers. It is a fitting conclusion to his legacy, however. With hints of Norse mythology he tells the story of Leif, an orphan who is the sole survivor of a contagion the takes the liives of the people in the small fishing camp where he lives. Old Carl, a mentor, puts him a good sturdy canoe and tells him to head north, always north. Leif sets out on a journey of discovery, about nature, about the ocean, and about himself. With no destination, only a direction, he settles into the journey, learning and growing along the way, filled with wonder even amid diversity. It is a reminder for too many of us who are so focused on the destination, we do not enjoy the wonder of the journe. There is a quote that speaks to me from the book: "It was all up to him. He could eat or starve, depending on his own actions, his own thoughts, his own plans. The same as the whales. Or the ravens. Or any living thing. From whales down to mice. All thinking. All taking care of themselves, by themselves, for themselves." Leif learns from nature as he crosses boundaries again and again between worlds. The other quote I would share really sums up this journey of discovery, it is the realization of our interconnection with one another and with all of creation. Through his journey, Leif finally understands hismself as part of a whole. Not an orphan but a child of the divine, joined to all things: “Now there is no line that separates me from the canoe, from what I have become. The boat is my skin and body and mind and I am the water and wood and the sun and the birds. All one. All together as one. I am part of it now. Part of all of it. I have become.”

Mr. Paulsen, you will be missed. ( )
1 vota Al-G | Jul 25, 2023 |
So survivalist fiction was a staple of mine growing up. Or rather survivalist movies were. Some days I felt like my mom wanted to abandon everything and go live in the woods. However, after one or two terrifying to a ten year old incidents involving literature set in the wild......let's just say they are not what I gravitate towards.

However, Gary Paulsen has written another book that I think will be enjoyed by fans of the adventure genre. Instead of the mountains, we are instead along the sea. I pictured the Pacific Northwest and Alaska as I read these pages. Leif's encounters with bears, whales, whirlpools....his fishing with a man made spear and gathering berries to survive.....many will enjoy this story. Indeed, it is a love story to the wild.

For me, it is not my favorite genre to read. I also struggled that Leif was the lone character and there was not a bit of dialogue to be found. Indeed, Northwind read like a David Attenborough voiced documentary with Leif's occasional inner dialogue read by Morgan Freeman. LOL So if you want a book with an actual plot (as opposed to just embracing nature and continuing to flee sickness and Man), this isn't it. But will I recommend it to readers looking for adventure tales? Survival tales? You bet! ( )
  msgabbythelibrarian | Jun 11, 2023 |
The target audience is unclear. There's violence for adults yet it's for preteen audiences. Many scenes have a Life of Pi energy but then it turns simple. There's great terms and grisly ones. "Covered in released stomach and anal gore" as they lay dying.
This entire book is one long poem, and being finished before Gary Paulsen died, it feels like his last message from the grave. But I'm not sure what his message is supposed to be. A positive one? Or of humans plagued by a disease that consumes all they love? What were we supposed to feel here, Gary?

But it's not fun to read. It's fun, but it has to be read out loud. All the nuances of the word play and writing needs to be said out loud.

That's a pretty steep requirement for enjoyment. When I first read it, I felt nothing. But when I read parts out to my wife, it was magical and prose. Thus your mileage is effected by if you heard it read to you or if you read it alone.

A terrible catch to put into a book. Children won't know what they're experiencing and adults will be confused.
(And most of the GR reviews are every stage of confusion.)

Especially one that's for a vague age range higher than children who normally get read to. Gary has shared his final book into a quagmire of messy experiences with Northwind. And it's hamstrung him.

There's a huge focus on the person, not the surroundings. A poetic story that requires the reader see it as poetry.

3.5 stars. ( )
  Yolken | May 9, 2023 |
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When sickness decimates his fishing village, an orphan named Leif flees north in a cedar canoe, journeying along a brutal but beautiful coastline.

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