Lost in the Barrens is a children's novel by Farley Mowat, first published in 1956. Some editions used the title Two Against the North. It won a Governor General's Award in 1956 and the Canada Library Association Book of the Year for Children Award in 1958. The book tells of boys in their late teens: one white boy who has recently lost his parents, and one Indian boy from the Cree tribe of the same age. The boys embark on a mission to relieve the starvation of a neighbouring Indian village, the Chipewayans, but due to a series of unfortunate events become trapped above the tree line in... Canada's Barren Lands during winter. The characters emerge again in Mowat's The Curse of the Viking Grave. The parents of Jamie died in a car crash, thus he was under the care of his trapper uncle, Angus. Angus had supported Jamie's boarding-school fees for a long time, until the fur trade had declined. Angus could no longer support Jamie's school. Thus, Jamie left the boarding school to live with his uncle. Jamie made friends with the Cree Tribe's Chief's son, Awasin.
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| Author: | Farley Mowat |
| Genre: | Children's literature, Fiction, Nature |
| Year published: | 1956 |
| Number of editions: | 12 |