Dreaming the Bear
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- $10.99
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- $10.99
Publisher Description
A vivid sense of the wilderness and nature’s power comes through in this intriguing and tension-filled YA novel narrated by a contemporary teen. Perfect for animal lovers, this unusual novel has hints of the quirky charm of Geek Girl and the emotional depth of The Last Leaves Falling.
Darcy’s dad, a naturalist, moves their family from England to the snowy wilderness of Yellowstone National Park. Mum, Dad, and older brother Jem are all thriving, but Darcy misses her friends, and civilization, including WiFi. She’s also sick, getting weaker with each day, and having strange dreams—or are they something else?
Then she finds an injured mother bear whose cubs were killed by hunters. The bear is enormous, and powerful, but she doesn’t threaten Darcy—she makes Darcy feel alive. The bear needs Darcy just as much as Darcy needs her. Darcy must help her, even though she might not be well enough to take care of the bear, let alone herself.
A mystery illness, shifting points of view, and dreamlike sequences make this an unusual and immersive story. Darcy is brave and resourceful, but nothing has prepared her to confront nature’s ultimate question: Can a girl and a wild bear triumph over the basic rule of survival: kill or be killed?
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Originally published in the U.K., Thebo's U.S. debut awkwardly juxtaposes a teen's adjustment to a new environment with a supernatural, out-of-body connection to a bear. A move from England to Yellowstone National Park not only disrupts narrator Darcy's social life but also lands her with a case of pneumonia, as well as persistent "seeing-myself-from-a-distance" moments. While snowshoeing, the perilously exhausted Darcy lies down with a wounded bear who has lost her cubs, beginning a series of episodes with the bear in which Darcy enters a faraway state and observes herself from the outside. Darcy and the bear's connection strengthens with their every interaction, and their ill health becomes increasingly intertwined, but the jumbled narrative structure can be tricky to parse as it rotates among Darcy's first-person narration, italicized out-of-body observations, and third-person sections that anthropomorphize the bear's perceptions ("She ran. She left her cubs and ran. Can a bear feel shame?"). It's an unusual twist on an against-the-odds wilderness adventure but doesn't quite come together cohesively. Ages 12 up.