They never tell you directly, but one day Aunt Martha told Miyax that her father had never returned from a hunting trip, and pieces of his kayak were found on the shore.
She finds food and she lives with the wolves so she bacomes to love them.
Julie ( Miyax- her eskimo name) is an eskimo runing away from her autistic husband Daniel, to protect herself from him. She desides to go to San Francisco where her penpal lives. On her way there she gets lost and ends up in the tundra. In the tundra she meets a pack of wolves who take care of her. She acts like a wolf and gets accepted in the pack. They face many challenges and are one the edge of surviving. When hunting season come around she nows it is not safe. A plane used for hunting is flying all around the area where they are living. The wolves are in trouble and might not survive...you read the ending to find out what happens. :)Its by Jean Craighead George and its called Julie and the Wolves
the conflict in the book is that will is trying to find his father.
Camping
In the book Eric never wrote about the father's name, in Joshua's perspective, he always just called him Dad.
Julie's father is deceased in the book ''Julie of the Wolves.'' He has passed away before the events of the story take place.
She is Julie of the wolves, if that is what you are asking. She has a different eskimo name.
the main characters in Julie of the Wolves are Miyax/Julie and the Wolves.
In the book "Julie of the Wolves" by Jean Craighead George, the wolves are described as having a gray coloring. The pups are also described as having a gray coat, which helps them blend in with their surroundings in the Arctic tundra.
A bunch of hunters kill him
If my memory is correct, he sorta tried to rape her >< My least favorite part of that book.
She finds food and she lives with the wolves so she bacomes to love them.
Jean Craighead George won the Newbery Medal for her book "Julie of the Wolves" in 1973.
in a tundra on Antarctica
realistic fiction or traditional fiction. -Gunthins
"Julie of the Wolves" by Jean Craighead George was originally published in 1972, so the copyright date would likely be around that time.
In the paperback version there are 208 pages; the hardcover edition has 192 pages.