Lost in the Barrens
By Farley Mowat
4/5
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Currently unavailable
Currently unavailable
About this ebook
When first published in 1956, Lost in the Barrens won the Governor-General’s Award for Juvenile Literature, the Book-of-the-Year Medal of the Canadian Association of Children’s Librarians and the Boys’ Club of America Junior Book Award.
Farley Mowat
<p><b>Farley Mowat</b> was a Canadian writer, environmentalist, and activist. After serving in the military and exploring as a field technician in remote areas of Canada, Mowat published his first book, <I><b>People of the Deer</I></b>, in 1952. Over the next half-century he published dozens of titles and is best known for <I><b>Never Cry Wolf</I></b>, an account of his adventures with Arctic wolves in northern Manitoba, <I><b>The Dog Who Wouldn't Be</I></b>, a book for young adults, <I><b>The Boat Who Wouldn't Float</I></b> about his adventures sailing along the Newfoundland coast.</p>
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Reviews for Lost in the Barrens
91 ratings9 reviews
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5Of the 100 books on the list from CBC "100 Young Adult Books That Make You Proud to be Canadian" I have only read 8 so I thought I should try to remedy that. In my (partial) defence I will say that quite a few of the books on the list have been written since I could claim to be a Young Adult myself. However, this book was written in 1956 so I had lots of years to discover it but somehow it escaped my notice. Well, it's never too late.Jamie Macnair comes to northern Manitoba to live with his uncle who is a trapper. A year after Jamie joins him his uncle and the chief from the neighbouring Cree nation have to make a long trip by canoe to The Pas to sell their furs. There is not enough room for Jamie in the canoe so he is left in the Cree settlement with the chief's family which includes Jamie's best friend, Awasin. A few weeks after the men leave a group of Chipeweyans who live further north come to ask for bullets as their people are starving. Denikazi, the Chipeweyan chief, wants to go north to meet the migration of caribou as they come down to the treeline where they winter. Awasin, as the chief's son agrees to give the bullets providing he can go to the Chipeweyan camp to verify the people are starving. Jamie is eager to accompany him on this adventure. When they arrive at the encampment they can see the truth of the story and they agree to hand over the ammunition. However, Denikazi wants Awasin and Jamie to accompany him on the hunt because they have much better rifles. The boys agree and set off with a small group to go further north into the barrens. Awasin and Jamie become separated from the others and are forced to spend the winter in this desolate area (which would be in Nunavut now). Their survival rests on their abilities, knowledge and skills.Although this was written over 60 years ago it didn't seem all that dated. In the wilderness people who can hunt, fish and make clothing and shelter would use many of these same tactics today. And it is a rousing good adventure story.
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5In the spirit of "Hatchet" or "My Side of the Mountain" is this story about survival in the wilderness. During a hunting expedition, Jamie and his Cree friend decide to explore deeper into the wilderness, only to find themselves far from help, with few supplies and winter on the way. This is their story of survival.I liked this book, partly due to how the characters were developed, and partly for the descriptive and believable solutions the boys employed in their day-to-day needs and problems. It is more of a YA story, but is worth reading by adults as well.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Lost in the Barrens by Farley Mowat was a cracking adventure story of two boys, Jamie, a white boy who lives with his trapper uncle and his friend, Awasin a young Cree. They accidentally get left behind in the far north when their canoe gets wrecked and they are left for dead. Without their canoe and as it is late in the season and the boys know they cannot set out for home until they have stocked up with supplies and made clothing to suit the winter.With only a small amount of gear, which luckily includes a hunting rifle, they are able to obtain meat from the migrating caribou. After some exploring, they discover a hidden valley that has trees and they are able to fashion together a dwelling place that will withstand the coming blizzards. They are doing quite well for themselves but around Christmas time, overcome with homesickness and deceived by the mild weather they decide to set out for home. As they leave the shelter of their valley and head out across the open tundra, they run into various perils and are finally saved by the one thing they fear the most, Eskimos.Both the use of the word Eskimo and the decision that an ancient grave belongs to a viking due to the horned helmet it contained tended to date the book, but overall this is a great adventure story that I would recommend to children from age 10 and up. How I missed reading this Canadian classic tale in my school days absolutely stumps me. Anyone who enjoys survival books is sure to love this tale of ingenuity and cooperation.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5One of the first book I bought with my own money. I read it over and over and over as a kid.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5A book which bring two boys together in friendship while trying to survive. They are left behind from the leader when they go adventuring in the barrens. They wonder off and are left behind. A wondewrful book and a great adventure story. I loved it.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5A spellbinding adventure story, it won the 1956 Governor General's Award for Juvenile Literature, and other book awards.Awasin, a Cree Indian boy, and Jamie, a Canadian orphan living with his uncle, the trapper Angus MacNair, are caught by the lure to explore the great Arctic wastes. A memorable tale of daring and adventure.
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5Good enough that I remember the book almost 50 years later, after reading during a series of rainy days at sleepaway camp in the camp library.
From his non-fiction writings Mowat was obviously familiar with the high Arctic. One of the events of the book was a December warm wave that almost fatally lured the two adventurers trapped in the tundra to strike out for the tree line and milder weather. Should give pause to climate alarmists since novels usually hew pretty close to real geographic and weather conditions.
Another was the kindness of strangers. Overall, if still in print, I recommend it. - Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5One of my all time favorite books. Written for young adults, it's the story of two boys--one white, one Cree Indian--who are stranded in the Northern wilderness of Canada and have to survive by their wits. Can't put it down storytelling, plain and simple. I checked this book out from a reading class in junior high, and gave it to my Mom, who had to read it in one night because it was due the next day. This copy is from my Uncle Steve and Aunt Maureen, and I got it on my birthday as a boy.
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5This is juvenile fiction at its finest. Mowat used his experience of life in the Barrens of Northern Canada (see: People of the Deer & The Desperate People) to tell an adventure story about a white city-boy and a young Cree making big decisions and surviving off he land.The pacing is perfect, and the content’s meaty enough to enjoy this book even as an adult. I dare you to read it without imagining yourself in those situations. The book certainly deserved its 1958 CLA Children’s Book of the Year award.As I read it I had this vague sense of déjà vu. I suspect one of my grade-school teachers might have read this to our class. I can hardly wait until my three-year-old son is old enough to enjoy it when I read it to him.