Skip to main content
PBS logo
 
 

Search - The Voyage of the Frog

The Voyage of the Frog
The Voyage of the Frog
Author: Gary Paulsen
David thought he was alone, that the ocean around him was all there was of the world. The wind screamed, the waves towered, and his boat, the twenty-two foot fiberglass FROG, skidded and bucked and, each moment, filled deeper and grew heavier with sea water. — David thought surely he was dead at fourteen. His uncle Owen, who had taught him about ...  more »
Info icon
ISBN-13: 9780545085359
ISBN-10: 0545085357
Publication Date: 3/1/2009
Pages: 160
Reading Level: Young Adult
Rating:
  • Currently 3.9/5 Stars.
 4

3.9 stars, based on 4 ratings
Publisher: Scholastic Paperbacks
Book Type: Mass Market Paperback
Other Versions: Hardcover, Audio Cassette
Reviews: Member | Amazon | Write a Review
Read All 3 Book Reviews of "The Voyage of the Frog"

Please Log in to Rate these Book Reviews

hardtack avatar reviewed The Voyage of the Frog on + 2700 more book reviews
A great story for young readers. The night he was almost run down by a tanker, reminded me of a night in the Atlantic when I was at the helm of a sailboat headed back to shore.

I wasn't the captain by any means, just a passenger. But my girlfriend and I had the duty and all we had to do was follow a compass direction. The sails weren't set, we were using the motor, so the captain could get some sleep. But when the freighter appeared in the dark coming toward us, I got more than a 'little' nervous. Fortunately, we weren't on the same track. Funny, I haven't thought about that night in decades.

The book is a typical Paulsen. A youngster gets in a bad situation and uses his wits to learn a way out of it. Still, I wondered how his parents let a 14-year-old sail out of sight of land at night by himself, even if he was fulfilling a promise to his uncle. But then, it is a novel.
havan avatar reviewed The Voyage of the Frog on + 138 more book reviews
Fourteen-year-old David Alspeth has lost his favorite uncle to cancer. The uncle that taught him to sail and who had left him the Frog, his 22 foot sailboat. His last request is that David take his ashes to sea and dump them out of sight of land. In his grief David fails to plan ahead and carelessly sets sail at night without proper preparation. When David encounters a Pacific storm he realizes that he's not properly prepared to meet what the Pacific (or life) is throwing at him.

I thoroughly enjoyed this but then I'm always a sucker for sea stories. Given the themes, it's not surprising that some critics say that this is just a retelling of the Hatchet tale, and there are many, many similarities but I felt that this was overall, a better Bildungsroman than Hatchet was. Perhaps its just that I have more in common with a sailor than an air crash survivor, but I felt that threats were present without the time consuming scrambling for survival, giving the protagonist more time for reflection. In the end it's a kinder gentler coming-of-age story than Hatchet and I'm surprised it hasn't gotten more of a following as it has more that most young readers could identify with.

If you read Hatchet and enjoyed it, by all means check this out. And if you're a young sailor you definitely should read this.
reviewed The Voyage of the Frog on + 5 more book reviews
My middle school aged boys loved this book.


Genres: