Book version: Billy's dogs were killing the Pritchards' dog, so Rubin decided to kill Billy's dogs. He picked up Billy's ax and then started running. He tripped on a stick and fell. The ax's blade entered Billy's stomach, therefore killing him.
Movie version: BIlly's dogs were killing the Pritchards' dog, so Rubin decided to kill Billy's dogs. He picked up Billy's ax and started running, but Billy didn't want his dogs to die. Billy tackled at Rubin's legs, causing him to fall. As he did, the ax's blade entered Rubin's body (which didn't actually happen, because that's too graphic.), causing him to die.
Ruban die's by Billy tripping him with a tree branch because he was chasing Billy's dog's with ax to kill them after they had atacked his bluetick hound. Anyway's, You shouldn't run with an ax anyways.
Old Dan dies on page 251 in the book "Where the Red Fern Grows" by Wilson Rawls.
Where the Red Fern Grows is about Billy who buys two redbone hounds. The hounds die in Chapter 19.
She was so depressed about Old Dan's death that she died.
he fights with a lion and his guts come out and he dies
The dogs Old Dan and Little Ann die at the end of the book "Where the Red Fern Grows." Their deaths occur in the final chapters of the book when they encounter a mountain lion.
A little Indian boy and girl were lost in the snow and froze to death. When they were found in the spring, a red fern grew between their bodies. Only an angel could plant the seeds of the red fern, and they never die, so where one grew the spot was sacred.
Wilson Rawls, the author of "Where the Red Fern Grows," died at the age of 56 in 1984.
The resolution in "Where the Red Fern Grows" occurs when the protagonist, Billy, comes to terms with the loss of his beloved dogs and learns important lessons about life, love, and perseverance. He finds closure and a sense of peace, symbolized by the red fern growing over his dogs' graves.
the dogs. the boy dog is attacked by a couger or something and the other dog dies of a broken heart. in the end the boys mother says they are moving to the city an God took the dogs so the family could live in the city which is their dream.
no that's not how the dogs died in real life, in real life they died of old age
Woodrow Wilson Rawls, author of Where the Red Fern Grows and My Summer of the Monkeys, lived for 71 years. He was diagnosed with cancer in 1983 and died from it a year later on December 16th.