Allan W. Eckert (1931–2011)
Author of Incident at Hawk's Hill
About the Author
Allan W. Eckert was born in Buffalo, New York on January 30, 1931. He served in the United States Air Force and attended the University of Dayton and Ohio State University. He was a historian, naturalist, novelist, poet, screenwriter and playwright. He wrote over 40 books during his lifetime show more including A Time of Terror: The Great Dayton Flood, Wild Season, The Silent Sky, The Frontiersmen, Wilderness Empire, The Conquerors, and A Sorrow in Our Heart: The Life of Tecumseh, which were all nominated for the Pulitzer Prize in literature. He received the Newbery Honor Book Award for Incident at Hawk's Hill. He also wrote almost all of the scripts for television's Wild Kingdom and adapted The Frontiersmen into the play Tecumseh! He died of prostate cancer on July 7, 2011 at the age of 80. (Bowker Author Biography) show less
Image credit: via Tantor Media
Series
Works by Allan W. Eckert
1969 1ST EDITION WILDERNESS EMPIRE INDIANS IROQUOIS LEAGUE MAPS DJ GIFT IDEA [Hardcover] ALLAN W. ECKERT (1969) 5 copies
The Frontiersman, Wilderness Empire, The Conquerors, Wilderness War, Gateway To Empire, Twilight Of Empire [six volume set] (1967) 3 copies, 1 review
Rare SORROW IN OUR HEART, LIFE OF TECUMSEH by ECKERT; KONECKY MEN AT WAR Series [Hardcover] Allan W. Eckert (1992) 2 copies
Associated Works
Reader's Digest Condensed Books 1974 v01: The Tower / Incident at Hawk's Hill / Stay of Execution / The Mountain Farm / The Thirteenth Trick (1974) 27 copies
Reader's Digest Condensed Books: The Invisible Cord • Incident at Hawk's Hill • Daylight Must Come • Centennial (1975) 3 copies
Reader's Digest Auswahlbücher: Die Libelle / Mein Leben, mein Dorf / Tollkühn / Begegnung am Bussardhügel (1986) 3 copies
Dødens gab / Ørnen er landet ; af Jack Higgins ; Høgebakken ; Allan W. Eckert. Min kloge mor ; af Dorothy Scannell (1976) 3 copies
Het Beste Boek 97: Een zak vol knikkers / Aasgier van de golven / Het gebeurde bij de haviksheuvel / Vlucht naar Landfall (1981) 2 copies, 1 review
Livros condensados: Ema E Eu | Aeroporto | Na Corda Bamba | Aconteceu Em Hawk's Hill — Author — 2 copies
Het Beste Boek: Risico / De kaping van Pelham een twee drie / De berghoeve / Julians avontuurlijke reis / De bastaard 1 copy, 1 review
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Legal name
- Eckert, Allan Wesley
- Birthdate
- 1931-01-30
- Date of death
- 2011-07-07
- Gender
- male
- Education
- University of Dayton
Ohio State University - Occupations
- historian
playwright
children's book author
novelist - Organizations
- United States Air Force
- Nationality
- USA
- Birthplace
- Buffalo, New York, USA
- Places of residence
- Chicago, Illinois, USA
Bellefontaine, Ohio, USA - Place of death
- Corona, California, USA
- Associated Place (for map)
- USA
Members
Discussions
Child's 1980s novel about boy who can enter animals' minds in Name that Book (April 2018)
a childrens book about a boy who lives in a badger hole in Name that Book (October 2015)
Reviews
The Frontiersmen is incredibly immersive, often reading like a novel bringing to life the old frontier of Ohio and Kentucky from about 1774 to 1810, the bloody period when it was settled by Americans and the Indians were pushed west (or dead). Despite it's strong narrative it's also a history and reliable for the most part. Published in 1967, Allan W. Eckert used creative non-fiction techniques before the style was respectable and so he has taken some flak for accuracy, and indeed there are show more some significant goofs - for example Blue Jacket was probably not white. Even if a few tales may be frontier legend they are archetypal and thus still of value. If not Blue Jacket there were other whites who went 'native'.
As an avid outdoor adventure/history reader it's embarrassing how much I know about, say, Antarctica, yet so little about the history of the land I live in and around so this book is a reminder one doesn't need travel far to find great adventure. show less
As an avid outdoor adventure/history reader it's embarrassing how much I know about, say, Antarctica, yet so little about the history of the land I live in and around so this book is a reminder one doesn't need travel far to find great adventure. show less
Wow, this book. It was a bit rough going at first. Due to the age of the story, the way people talk felt awkward, the background explanation of the boy’s family felt over-explained in a rather stiff way. But once I got into the real part of the story, I was blown away. Especially by the ending. Very traumatic, bittersweet and delightful all at the same time. It’s about a boy who has a secret ability- he can transfer his consciousness into any animal nearby. There’s no element of magic show more (why I tagged this one as ‘speculative fiction’) it’s just something he’s always been able to do. He can taste, hear, smell, feel every sensation the animal experiences- including exhilaration, fear, pain, etc- but not control them at all. The boy has tried to share his experiences with his parents, what he feels and learns when spending minutes to hours as an animal- but they think he’s daydreaming and brush it off, then get impatient that he doesn’t give up the idea, then get concerned that there’s something wrong with him mentally or emotionally. They go away on a planned trip and leave him on a horse farm the mother’s friend owns. The boy has never been around horses before and he’s fascinated by them- and of course he goes inside them (as he calls the phenomenon). He has to be careful to keep what he’s doing hidden from other people, having learned from reactions not only by his parents but also his best friend, that nobody understands this, people make fun of him, avoid him, or are suspicious of his activities. However when a veterinarian visits the farm, the boy is intrigued by his work and hangs around watching. He’s able of course to feel what the animals do, and tries to hint at the vet what’s wrong if the problem is not found. This works for a while but it starts to get more difficult to hide his ability, the vet (who becomes a close mentor, almost a father figure) starts to get suspicious. And then a prized horse in the barn falls deadly ill, but nobody knows except our protagonist. He tries to do something, but it all goes terribly wrong . . . leading to an almost tragedy.
I won’t say more in case someone actually wants to read this. If you have a deep interest in animals, or ever daydreamed (like I did as a kid) about being able to fly like a bird, run as fast as a horse, walk quietly in the night as a cat seeing everything clearly . . . this book will become an instant favorite. There was so much love of nature woven into the story, and fantastic details about how wild animals live their lives, even new things the boy discovered about them (but then couldn’t tell anybody how he’d learned it). This is the greatest by Eckert I’ve read so far- even tops Incident at Hawk’s Hill, which has always been steadfastly among the best books ever, in my mind. show less
I won’t say more in case someone actually wants to read this. If you have a deep interest in animals, or ever daydreamed (like I did as a kid) about being able to fly like a bird, run as fast as a horse, walk quietly in the night as a cat seeing everything clearly . . . this book will become an instant favorite. There was so much love of nature woven into the story, and fantastic details about how wild animals live their lives, even new things the boy discovered about them (but then couldn’t tell anybody how he’d learned it). This is the greatest by Eckert I’ve read so far- even tops Incident at Hawk’s Hill, which has always been steadfastly among the best books ever, in my mind. show less
These intertwined biographies of Simon Kenton, William Henry Harrison, and Tecumseh are very informative and a swiftly moving read. We have three paradigms here:, the Romantic Frontiersman, Kenton; the Valiant Indian, Tecumseh,; and the Manipulative politician : William Henry Harrison. Eckert would later write a longer biography of Tecumseh, the most attractive of the trio.
But if more people had read this chapter in Eckert's history of the Old Northwest, perhaps there might be a reduction in show more the amount of trouble caused by the modern attempts to substitute myth for understanding.
Eckert's more intimate style certainly humanizes the past. If one reads the introduction, this was not written as a piece of fiction, but puts dialogues into the text of the historical account when indicated by the sources. show less
But if more people had read this chapter in Eckert's history of the Old Northwest, perhaps there might be a reduction in show more the amount of trouble caused by the modern attempts to substitute myth for understanding.
Eckert's more intimate style certainly humanizes the past. If one reads the introduction, this was not written as a piece of fiction, but puts dialogues into the text of the historical account when indicated by the sources. show less
From the same author of Incident at Hawk’s Hill (a book loved as a kid) Story of a wild cat, offspring of a domestic cat and a male bobcat. Have to say right off the bat, there’s a lot of brutality, starting with a man trying to drown a mother housecat and her kittens. The protagonist of the story, the crossbreed himself, is the sole survivor when the log his mother denned in gets swept down a river in a flood. He’s exhausted, half frozen and near starved when rescued by a kid who’s show more out fishing. The boy knows his father hates cats (especially wild ones) so he hides the kitten in a shed on their property. Raises the crossbreed, names it Yowler, and even successfully teaches it to hunt. Eventually the boy’s father discovers the cat and things go badly. The boy runs away with Yowler but they get separated- Yowler is on his own in the wild, where he’d do okay really- there’s pages and pages describing his successful hunting forays- but he runs into trouble when is chased by hounds, caught by disreputable men who put him in staged fights with dogs, and after escaping, gets caught by a steel trap... Through his misadventures Yowler ends up far south of his normal territory, encountering animals he’s never seen before- armadillos, freshwater crocodiles, a wolf. Also has run-ins with lynx and bobcats- mates with several females but since he’s a hybrid himself, there are never any young. And in one improbable but very sweet encounter, he temporarily adopts an orphaned bobcat kitten. He travels north whenever he gets the chance, eventually finding his way back to his birthplace and even the site where the boy had raised him in the shed. I liked this story, even if some parts of it were particularly gruesome (the fights with dogs in that people bet on) or a bit unlikely (adopting the kitten himself). Dubious if a domestic cat / bobcat cross actually is a thing, plus some of the behavior in here isn't realistic, but I enjoyed it regardless. show less
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