Hunter
by Joy Cowley
On This Page
Description
A Maori boy in 1803 and a plane crash survivor marooned on a deserted island in 2003 experience interconnecting visions.Tags
Recommendations
Member Reviews
In 1805 Hunter is a young Maori slave who has the unique ability to see with his inner eye, allowing him to find game for the tribe. He is also plotting his escape and biding his time until the right opportunity reveals itself. While on a hunt for the elusive Moa bird that he sees in a vision, that opportunity arises. But he is also experiencing a new vision, seeing a flying canoe that holds three children, one, a young girl with golden hair and blue eyes. When the flying canoe crashes on the beach, Hunter finds he must stay close and risk re-capture in order to come to the aid of this “moon maiden” and her two younger brothers.
Flash forward to 2005 and Jordan and her two younger brothers are on their way home from spending some show more time with their aunt in Wellington. When their small charted plane crashes, she must learn how to survive and keep her brothers safe in the wilderness of Southern New Zealand. Listening and allowing an inner voice to guide her, they are able to sustain themselves and keep hope alive.
Hunter, the winner of the New Zealand Post Children’s Book of the Year 2006 is a riveting story by Joy Cowley that brings two worlds together and gives us an inspired message of how the human spirit can be connected through past generations. The author skilfully allows tension to mount in both stories as Hunter in turn becomes hunted yet cannot leave as the shadow children need his advice on food and medicine. As both a survival story and in introduction to Maori culture this book is highly readable. show less
Flash forward to 2005 and Jordan and her two younger brothers are on their way home from spending some show more time with their aunt in Wellington. When their small charted plane crashes, she must learn how to survive and keep her brothers safe in the wilderness of Southern New Zealand. Listening and allowing an inner voice to guide her, they are able to sustain themselves and keep hope alive.
Hunter, the winner of the New Zealand Post Children’s Book of the Year 2006 is a riveting story by Joy Cowley that brings two worlds together and gives us an inspired message of how the human spirit can be connected through past generations. The author skilfully allows tension to mount in both stories as Hunter in turn becomes hunted yet cannot leave as the shadow children need his advice on food and medicine. As both a survival story and in introduction to Maori culture this book is highly readable. show less
In 2005 Jordan and her two younger brothers survive a plane crash but are stranded in remote Fiordland on the South-West coast of New Zealand. In 1805 Hunter, a young Maori slave, is hiding in the same location after escaping his captors. He knows he needs to keep running but he also knows that the interconnecting visions he's sharing with Jordan will help her and her brothers survive. The slave is in fact Jordan's great, great, great grandfather and his life force is connected to Jordan. A brilliantly written book that allowed you to flick in and out of the two different time zones and understand the connection
Thoroughly enjoyed. Recommend for senior primary level
Ratings
Members
- Recently Added By
Lists
A Child's Book Tour of New Zealand
67 works; 4 members
Survival, plane crash -- children's/young adult fiction
112 works; 3 members
Survival, islands -- children's/young adult fiction
123 works; 7 members
Author Information

1,355+ Works 32,786 Members
Cassia Joy Cowley is a New Zealand language and reading specialist. She was born on August 7, 1936, in Levin, New Zealand. She has written more than 500 books for beginning readers, many of which have been honored internationally. The Cheese Trap won the AIM Children's Book Award for Best Picture Book (1996) and Red-Eyed Tree Frog won the Boston show more Globe-Horn Book Award for Best Picture Book (1999). She has won New Zealand Post Children's Book Awards for Best Junior Fiction for Ticket to the Sky Dance (1998) and Starbright and the Dream Eater (1999). The Mouse Bride (1998) is being produced as an animated program for New Zealand television. In 2002, Cowley was awarded the Roberta Long Medal, presented by the University of Alabama at Birmingham for culturally diverse children's literature. In 2004, she was awarded the A. W. Reed Award for Contribution to New Zealand Literature, and in 2010, she won the Prime Minister's Award for Literary Achievement in the Fiction category. She is also a 2016 Astrid Lindgren award nominee. In 2018 she will be awarded the New Zealand Order of Merit and also shortlisted for The Hans Christian Andersen Award. She was also awarded the Storylines Gaelyn Gordon Award for her her title Nicketty-Nacketty, Noo-Noo-Noo in 2018. She was awarded the 2018 Order of New Zealand, which recognises outstanding service to the state and people of the country. (Bowker Author Biography) show less
Awards and Honors
Classifications
Statistics
- Members
- 75
- Popularity
- 419,442
- Reviews
- 3
- Rating
- (4.38)
- Languages
- English
- Media
- Paper
- ISBNs
- 2
- ASINs
- 1























































