45 pages • 1 hour read
Gary PaulsenA modern alternative to SparkNotes and CliffsNotes, SuperSummary offers high-quality Study Guides that feature detailed chapter summaries and analysis of major themes, characters, quotes, and essay topics.
For Paulsen, the moose is a symbol of the unavoidable danger of nature. The animal represents the gap between a human’s understanding of preparedness and the inherent dangers of the natural world, which cannot be accounted for. The moose’s sudden fits of rage, seeming “madness,” and inexplicable violence are symbolic of a danger that cannot be mitigated. For Paulsen, much of nature can be understood by gleaning experience and knowledge from the forest. However, there will always be dangers, and Paulsen’s many vignettes about death in the woods demonstrate how sudden and random some incidents appear (for example, the man who rapidly dies of a poison ivy allergy). The wilderness will never be a safe place, no matter how skilled the survivalist is, because out there somewhere is the moose—or, alternatively, natural phenomena and challenges out of one’s control.
Fire is representative of knowledge. It is a motif that explains man’s ability to know the wild, to make logical reasonings and assumptions about nature through observation and manipulation, and thus to conquer nature. Fire allows for safe, drinkable water and edible meat. Fire offers warmth in the cold and light in the dark. More importantly, fire offers peace and a connection to distant ancestors: “I can’t think of many things, including Iditarods or sailing the Pacific, that affected me as deeply as getting that fire going; I felt as early man must have felt when he discovered fire, and it was very strange but I didn’t want to put it out” (Guts: 123).
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