Six-year-old Ben is very small for his age, and gets along better with animals than people. One June day in 1870, Ben wanders away from his home on Hawk's Hill and disappears into the waving prairie grass. This is the story of how a shy, lonely boy survives for months in the wilds and forges a bond with a female badger. ALA Notable Book. Newbery Honor Book.
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Six-year-old Ben is very small for his age, and gets along better with animals than people. One June day in 1870, Ben wanders away from his home on Hawk's Hill and disappears into the waving prairie grass. This is the story of how a shy, lonely boy survives for months in the wilds and forges a bond with a female badger. ALA Notable Book. Newbery Honor Book.
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Seller's Description:
John Schoenherr. Very Good + 207 p.; small HC with glossy pictorial boards; Newbery Honor Book seal. Originally published in 1971, this is Allan Eckert's fictionalized account of a real incident in rural Manitoba, c. 1870, when a shy little boy wandered away from his family's farmhouse and spent the summer living with a female badger. B & W ink illustrations. A remarkable and moving story. Gift inscription in gold ink on ffep and signed "Allan". Very nice condition.
This book is the best I have ever read. When I took this book off the library shelf, I was thinking, "Is this a good book?" When I opened the cover and started reading, I just couldn't stop. In my opinion, it is the best book ever (just exagerrating it). Incident at Hawk's Hill is about a six year old boy named Ben, and his family. Ben was a very shy boy and seemed to get along more with animals than with people, even his own family. But then one day, he was following a chicken and disappeared into the prairie. MacDonald, Ben's father, found out that he actually loved his youngest son after he had slapped him. He quickly organized a search party of thirty-two men, asking for them to search the prairies and a sign of Ben. But after two long days and nights, the search party quit. MacDonald refused to quit knowing that Ben was still alive and that he loved him. Then one day, John, Ben's brother found traces of Ben's shoe which had fallen off after a terrible rainstorm. When he followed Ben's supposed trail of looking for a shelter, he found his brother, all dirty and grimy and took him back home. It had taken a lot of energy to get Ben back home. When John took Ben home, the family was overjoyed. When Ben recognized them and told them stories of him meeting a badger, feeding it and living with it, they all seemed afraid until they learned that Ben loved his badger and wanted to take good care of him.