Hoot
- Genre: Fiction; middle grade adventure
- Originally Published: 2002
- Reading Level/Interest: Lexile 760L; grades 5-8
- Structure/Length: 21 chapters and epilogue; approx. 292 pages; approx. 6 hours, 25 minutes on audio
- Protagonist and Central Conflict: Roy Eberhardt, who has recently moved from Montana to Coconut Cove, Florida, looks out the school bus window and sees a boy running. He follows him a few days later and learns that the boy, Mullet, is working to prevent a vacant lot from being bulldozed to build a pancake restaurant because the lot is home to some burrowing owls. Roy is gradually drawn into Mullet’s crusade and his troubled family life.
- Potential Sensitivity Issues: Underage smoking; bullying
Carl Hiaasen, Author
- Bio: Born and raised in Florida, where he still lives; graduated from the University of Florida; worked as a reporter for the Miami Herald; writes novels for both children and adults; his books have been published in 34 languages
- Other Works: Tourist Season (1986); Flush (2005); Chomp (2012); Squirm (2018)
- Awards: Newbery Honor Book (2003); ALA Notable Children’s Book (2003)
CENTRAL THEMES connected and noted throughout this Teaching Unit:
- Handling Problems Alone
- Adjusting to a New Place
- Standing Up to Callous Corporations
STUDY OBJECTIVES: In accomplishing the components of this Unit, students will:
- Develop an understanding of the social and cultural contexts regarding conservation that incite Roy’s conflict.