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California Bear: A Novel

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This "fresh, exciting, and brilliantly unpredictable" thriller (James Patterson) from a "great storyteller" (Michael Connelly) follows four unlikely vigilantes who pit themselves against the villain behind California’s coldest case when they decide to take justice into their own hands.

NONE OF YOU ARE SAFE   “KILLER”: Jack Queen has been exonerated and freed from prison thanks to retired LAPD officer Cato Hightower. But when guilt gnaws at Jack, he “I actually did it.” To which Hightower “Yeah, no kidding.” You see, the ex-cop has a special job in mind for the ex-con…   THE GIRL Fifteen-year-old Matilda Finnerty has been handed a potential death sentence in the form of a leukemia diagnosis. But that’s not going to stop her from tackling the most important mystery of her Is her father guilty of murder?   GENE Jeanie Hightower mends family trees for a living, but the genealogist is unable to repair her own marriage. And her soon-to-be ex may have entangled her in a scheme that has drawn the bloody wrath of…   THE A prolific serial killer who disappeared forty years ago, who is only now emerging from hibernation when the conditions are just right. And this time, the California Bear is not content to hunt in the shadows…   From two-time Edgar nominee Duane Swierczynski, California Bear is clever, moving, and surprising as it takes aim at the true crime industry, Hollywood, justice, and the killers inside us all.

360 pages, Kindle Edition

First published January 9, 2024

166 people are currently reading
4957 people want to read

About the author

Duane Swierczynski

525 books924 followers
Duane Swierczynski is an American crime writer who has written a number of non-fiction books, novels and also writes for comic books.

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Displaying 1 - 30 of 269 reviews
Profile Image for Still.
642 reviews118 followers
May 7, 2024
I’ve been a Duane Swierczynski champion since I discovered The Wheelman or Expiration Date… and then I found the Charlie Hardie trilogy. He’s easily one of my 10 favorite 21st century writers of Crime/Suspense/Thrillers.

This latest novel like Canary and Revolver before it features a younger girl protagonist facing personal issues while dispensing justice or finding alternatives. Her father’s just been released from prison after being wrongly convicted of a vehicular homicide. She’s in a hospital and undergoing exhausting treatment. Her mom was killed years earlier by the man her father was wrongly convicted of murdering.
And no. This is not a claustrophobic one-setting thriller like “Sorry -Wrong Number”. It sports page after page full of fistfights, gunplay, good cops, bad cops, and your choice of maniacs.

This is a mainstream standalone thriller with perfect pacing between chills and the fascinating mystery behind the return of a horrific serial killer inactive/retired for forty years.

The writing was reminiscent of Thomas Perry with a touch of Elmore Leonard, the way Swierczynski’s writing in Canary reminded me of Donald Westlake’s standalones.

Recommended Read For All Thriller Fans!
Profile Image for Melki.
7,310 reviews2,619 followers
January 27, 2024
One of these days I'm going to cut you into little pieces.

The California Bear was a serial killer who roamed the Hollywood Hills forty years ago. His self restraint and sneaky ways saved him from capture, and he's been hibernating ever since. BUT murderers are a hot commodity in project hungry Tinsel Town, and some people are willing to perpetuate the Bear's legend . . . no matter the cost. Caught up in all the mayhem are an ex-cop, an ex-con, a genealogist, and a teenage girl who can outwit them all.

This fast paced, twisty read is packed with humor and snappy dialogue. It's a rare writer who can make you gasp and laugh at the same time. This book is a whole lotta fun, though the author's afterword will leave you in tears.
Profile Image for Jason Bovberg.
Author 8 books122 followers
December 21, 2023
In CALIFORNIA BEAR, it’s the relationship between Jack and Matilda that resonates--and not simply because of its autobiographical elements, although those pack an emotional WALLOP. I dare you to read this novel and NOT come away with sympathetic tears in your eyes, resulting from the clearly-drawn-from life (and hilarious) banter between father and daughter, or the all-too-real intricacies and heart-rending realities of treating childhood leukemia, or simply your knowledge--as a loyal Swierczynski reader--that he is simply a still-grieving dad reconnecting with his lost girl in a stunning act of literary conjuring. But there’s even more to it than that: Beyond the true emotion from which Swierczynski has created his rich characters, he’s fashioned an extremely satisfying fictionalized father-daughter team-up in service of a very fun yarn. Theirs is a complicated, emotionally freighted, ultimately loving bond that serves the overarching mystery in ways that pay off in unexpected ways.
Profile Image for Karen.
528 reviews54 followers
November 10, 2024
Fantastic! Interesting and fun characters. Fast moving plot. Great storylines. Excellent narrators. I loved spending time with this book.
Profile Image for Dona's Books.
1,329 reviews286 followers
December 31, 2023
Thank you to the author Duane Swierczynski, publishers Mulholland Books and Little, Brown and Company, and NetGalley, for an advance digital copy of CALIFORNIA BEAR. All views are mine.

I don't like multiple perspectives unless they're executed smoothly and don't cause clarity issues. Unfortunately, I found four perspectives to be too many here, especially when considered with the numerous secondary characters. Style also interfered with the read; way too much narrative detail delivered in dialog, and dash phrases slowed things down. The plot unfolds too slowly and the storyline is burdened with unnecessary activity.

Honestly, this one is mostly a "me" thing. I didn't get along with the author's approach. But this one is worth the try, if it's your bag. Check out tropes below.

Rating: 💊💊.5 chemo pills
Recommend? Maybe
Finished: Dec 29 '23
Format: Digital arc, Kindle, NetGalley
Read this book if you like:
🚔 true crime
🔍 amateur sleuth
🔪 serial killer stories
👥️ multiple POVs
🖋 experimental narrative form
🙃 satire
Profile Image for Mike Finn.
1,611 reviews58 followers
May 7, 2024
I didn't know what to make of 'California Bear' at first. I was a little dazed by how bizarre it was. The tone was somewhere between Don Winslow and early Carl Hiaasen. The story, told from the point of view of four characters, each of whom was going through a major change in their lives and none of whom are at the centre of the personality bell curve, was intriguing and original. I could see that the intent was to satirise the True Crime industry. There was definitely crime but very little interest in truth.

We followed an ex-cop who got a killer's conviction overturned on a technicality so that he could get a cut of the compensation payout, we have the California Bear, a 'retired' serial killer who was never caught but who, in his old age, wants to be given credit for his 'work' and we have a Hollywood documentary producer who wants to make a big sale to the streaming companies but who says all the right words about justice and truth and respecting the victims.

Moslty, I liked the dark humour but I was uncomfortable with being in the Bear's head. He wasn't one of Hiaassen's larger-than-life- but-not-as-nasty-as-they-seem villains. He was a sadistic misogynist who still hungered for the rush of the kill. That didn't seem very funny to me.

I kept reading the book because I wanted to hear more from The Girl Detective. She's the tween daughter of the man whose murder conviction has just been overturned. She's smart, organised and passionate about doing the research to find out the truth about the murder her father was jailed for. She's also in hospital undergoing chemotherapy for an aggressive form of leukaemia that is likely to kill her. She lifted the book for me. She was brave, bright and had a dry sense of humour.

Then the tone of the book changed. It became less of a satire and more of a love-letter to the bravery of The Girl Detective. The California Bear transformed in interesting and unexpected ways. The women in the story came to the fore and started to subvert the agendas of the men around them. The Girl Detective started to put together what had happened and what was going to happen and did what she could to bring order to the chaos.

I was able to settle into the humour then. I had no idea where the story was going but I was happy to be along for the ride. I liked the fast pace of the story, the convoluted twists in the plot that linked everyone together in unpredictable ways and the unabashed confidence of the larger-than-life characters.

I was sad to get to the end of the book because I started to like some of the characters by then. The ending was neat and tidy and perhaps just a little to happily-ever-after but it was done with style and heart and it made me smile.

I recommend the audiobook version of 'California Bear'. It's done with multiple narrators and delivered with energy. I also recommend listening to the author's afterword where he explains how his own daughter's illness affected the novel.
Profile Image for K.
1,052 reviews35 followers
April 19, 2024
3.5 stars rounded up for California Bear by Duane Swiercynski. This was my first exposure to the author, so I didn't know what to expect, other than he'd made a good impression on several GR readers.
The story is really pretty far fetched, with little interest in credulity or plausibility for that matter. Yet, despite this, I found myself willingly hopping on board for the entertaining ride provided and being glad that I did. The plot is filled with delicious twists and some humor to balance the tension inducing scenes, during which the story really takes off. Dealing with a serial killer's psyche, regardless of the age or state of disrepair said psychopath possesses, usually results in some nail-biting. This book delivers those types of chapters in spades, and any complaints I might have had prior to arriving there quickly dissolved as the pages seemed to fly by.
Short chapters keep the pot on the boil, and it's difficult not to root for wee Matilda, a fourteen year old who is, generally speaking, the central character and by far the most interesting one. Along with this very precocious and incredibly bright young lady, we have any number of colorful characters, all of whom help to carry the story's inertia right along to the curious yet pleasing ending.
All in all, this is a fun read and should please many readers of the murder-mystery genre.
Profile Image for Dogsandbooksanddogsandbooks.
820 reviews42 followers
November 28, 2023
California Bear is a fun send up of the true crime dramas that showcases a savvy and critically ill nearly 15 year old girl- The Girl Detective, her father The Killer, The Bear (the real Killer), and the genealogist, Gene Jeanie. There is a madcap adventure quality about this very serious topic of serial killers and victims.
Snappy and sarcastic dialogue, quick chapters, and funny scenarios propels the reader along this journey to find the serial killer that appears to be active again after a 40 year hiatus. Why is The Bear active again? And who would profit from his activities? All reasonable questions but when living in California and near Hollywood, specifically, there is always money to be made from someone's pain.

Reading the author's Afterword brings the whole book into perspective and my hats off to his being able to bring this tale to completion. I can see California Bear being adapted as a series on Netflix or HULU, a modern take on Get Shorty, if you will.

Thank you to Novel Suspects and Mulholland Books for an early copy via Netgalley. All opinions are my own.
641 reviews12 followers
January 27, 2024
While the two main characters - a man released from prison and his critically ill daughter who plays amateur detective - are worth rooting for, it must be said the story here goes substantially off the rails in the final third. Characters are pulled in out of left field to provide resolutions, and last-minute twists are thrown in that are hard to swallow. I sense these folks will be back for another story. I hope it's better than this one.
Profile Image for Marcy.
811 reviews
February 13, 2024
4.5 - “California Bear was meant to be my jab at the true crime industry, where huge profits are reaped from people’s worst nightmares”. The author did this artfully with stock, yet interesting characters, and compulsively readable and darkly humorous writing. This story made me chuckle throughout, and the author’s note brought tears. Not a literary event, but I loved the read.
Profile Image for Jeanie ~ MyFairytaleLibrary.
642 reviews80 followers
February 1, 2024
The writing here is excellent and the characters are all so richly drawn. The story is original and the dialogue is clever and often witty. Be sure not to miss the afterword read by the author. The narration by James Urbaniak and Jesse Vilinsky is also very good.
Profile Image for Stephen.
397 reviews6 followers
January 15, 2024
Duane Swierczynski made his name early on as a writer with inventive plots and memorable characters. His first couple novels featured a mute Irish getaway driver, a woman who would die if she didn't keep someone within ten feet of her, and time traveling via aspirin. His later works, like Canary and Revolver, were more grounded, but still displayed his creativity and writing talents. California Bear, his first novel in seven years, shows Swierczynski is still a master of his craft.

The cast list might seem pulled from a straight-by-numbers thriller (a drunk ex-cop, a serial killer, and an ex-con and his teenage daughter), but each character is well written and full of heart. They each have their own motivations, talents, and flaws, which are evident from their introductions through the final page. As with his other novels, Swierczynski's novel is full of twists and turns, but each one feels earned and the people are at the heart of the story. Matilda Finnerty comes across as a real teenager who brings a strong element of pathos to the narrative. Swierczynski's real-life daughter Evie faced a diagnosis of leukemia like Matilda does in this book, and you can feel him pour his own personal love and heartache into this character.

Swierczynski is a mouthful of a Polish name, but it should be a household name. His books are some of the best out there and he deserves a larger audience.

Highly Recommended.
Profile Image for Michael J..
1,053 reviews34 followers
May 25, 2024
Since I haven't read all of Duane Swierczynski's crime novels, I don't feel qualified to say this is his best novel yet. However, from what I have read by him, this is my absolute favorite. CALIFORNIA BEAR is a great blend of crime, hollywood excess, social media, family relationships, and detection/mystery that is suspenseful, funny, satirical, and heart-warming in so many places.
Matilda Finnerty, "the girl detective", is a great character and a tribute/homage to Swiercynski's daughter Evie, who sadly passed away in October 2018, "facing the unknown with incredible strength and humor and grace." That he was able to finish the novel is admirable, and he has immortalized his daughter in memorable fiction.
Told from four different points-of-view in short, fast-paced chapters CALIFORNIA BEAR is a delightful read, full of surprising and often amusing twists and turns. I recommend you check it out.
Profile Image for Elizabeth.
725 reviews13 followers
February 22, 2024
4.5 stars. What an excellent read! Fun. Fast. Suspenseful. Humorous. Real. Unreal. I docked half a star only for the confusion surrounding the Bear character, particularly toward the end. The acknowledgements just about did me in.
Profile Image for Venus.
181 reviews77 followers
March 22, 2024
I enjoyed this book from start to finish! The humor and dialogue between the characters was so much fun. Very laid back serial killer thriller but well worth the read. The pool and donut scene will live in my memory forever. 🤣

READING VLOG✨reading 4 new thriller books
https://youtu.be/KQv9OTNjFFQ
Profile Image for David C Ward.
1,871 reviews45 followers
February 17, 2024
An “LA novel” whose attempt at off beat wackiness gets actively irritating after a while. It’s a miscalculation to try and make a serial killer/abductor/torturer into a jocular figure. Dude…..
Profile Image for Mark.
1,617 reviews135 followers
September 22, 2024
Four misfit vigilantes try to track down one of California’s most notorious serial killers, (loosely based on the Golden Gate Killer). Full of humor and suspense, with a fun fast-paced narrative. I have read and enjoyed at least seven of Swierczynski’s novels. If you have not read this author, give him a try.
Profile Image for Sally.
1,297 reviews
February 10, 2024
I enjoy the multiple points of view esp Girl Detective. She was awesome. I felt sorry for her dad, he didn’t seem to have a clue but he was a good dad. Every character was well written, good and bad they were all purposeful.

I had forgotten how much I liked Swierczynski’s humor and after reading the afterword, I appreciated it even more.

Profile Image for Chip.
937 reviews54 followers
December 24, 2024
My new favorite of Swierczynski’s books - this could easily have been a On Winslow novel (which is a compliment).
Profile Image for Tom Wile.
461 reviews6 followers
November 29, 2024
Really great story that I can see being a series. Make sure to read the afterword. It’s pretty touching. Would have been 5 stars but I felt like there were one too many red herrings and they were all pretty similar.
Profile Image for Elizabeth Love.
Author 11 books28 followers
December 18, 2023
This review is provided courtesy of NetGalley. It's been a privilege to read the latest crime fiction thriller by Duane Swierczynski. When I read the summary of this book, I wasn't sure my review would be necessary to put out there into the world (it probably isn't). I'm doing it anyway because I noticed that the larger media outlets weren't being specific about why they loved California Bear. Mulholland Books has blurbs from James Patterson and Michael Connolly. It's not like they're looking for mine, the average reader. You can expect this review to be more than five targeted keywords for SEO.

Is California Bear "fresh, exciting, and brilliantly unpredictable" as James Patterson said? Hell yes, it sure is.

In this story, Swierczynski takes his cast of characters and gives them reunions, introductions, estrangement,  and expected and unexpected teaming up time. The heart of the story is The Girl Detective and that's how her point of view is referenced. She's Matilda, a nearly fifteen-year-old high school who is more worried about completing her English assignment than her cancer diagnosis. It's all because her assignment, rather than a standard book report or essay, is to prove her father's innocence since he's just been released from prison for murder. This impassioned young sleuth distracts herself from all the chemotherapy, needles, constant interruptions by nurses, and wanting to reject the pity of others. She dives into this case about the serial killer known as the California Bear alongside the cold case of the real estate tycoon who had been run over and subsequently killed.

The Father is Jack "Killer" Queen, a former jazz musician who only wants to get the City of Los Angeles settlement money so he can focus on his only daughter. Throughout "Killer's" point of view, readers get to experience how long and complicated the grieving process is. Does Jack have Complex PTSD? I'm not a doctor, but he probably does. Prison alone will do that do a person; and Jack has been through the loss of his wife, his career, his freedom, and now the tragedy of Matilda's leukemia. Here's a man with the nickname Killer who had attorneys dictate to him how and when to show emotions, then incarcerated where you should not show "weakness," and now he's paying the piper as the saying goes. There's dark poetry in how confused this hardened man feels the mental and physical repercussions of grief.

Any reader would want what Jack "Killer" Queen wants—to be reunited with his daughter and work his ass off trying to get out of the past. He simply never gets a break. You feel for him every single time his friend, an ex-cop and present alcoholic named Cato Hightower, ropes Jack into yet another mission to pay him back for getting him out of prison on a technicality.

Everyone begins to wonder, where was the California Bear this whole time he's been dormant? Can the new advent of forensic genealogy prove this prolific serial killer's identity? The genealogist (named Jeanie) is Hightower's wife and she believes she can link DNA through the family tree.

In walks the "gift" of true crime mania which has swept the entertainment industry. A streaming show is in the works which plans to reveal the identity of the California Bear and tastelessly create reenactments at the actual locations of his murders in a Blair Witch Project way where the actors playing the victims don't know when it's coming. The producer has everything in place including a well-known action star to don the bear mask and clawing glove. The unethical, profit-driven producer who obviously knows the serial killer's identity, is shown for what he is. Even when the plans for the show seem to be at a loss, he comes up with a twist to keep it alive.

That's not the only twist. There are many in California Bear. With four main perspectives narrating the story, there are more twists than Lombard Street. Who keeps killing like the Bear after the real Bear is dead? Is this part of the show? Is it a rabid fan or a family member? Who is the next target?

Summary:

There are going to be a barrage of questions after each section of the book which are broken into brief chapters with the changing perspectives. Keep guessing. Then second guess yourself. Then realize you've never had anything right throughout the mystery of the serial killer known as the California Bear.

Rating: 5 stars
Profile Image for Carol.
181 reviews7 followers
February 16, 2024
This is a quirky novel about a serial killer known as the California Bear. Jack, a convicted killer, is exonerated and freed from prison by a retired LAPD cop, Cato. Cato knows Jack was guilty (!) but has a job for him. Jack's daughter is being treated for leukemia, this relationship between father and daughter and how they deal with Jack trying to find the Bear was my favorite part of the story. Fast paced, great dialogue, and a unique story, loved it! FYI, please do not read the "afterword" (it is at the end of the book) until you have finished the book, but do read it. The author tells how the story evolved and the personal motivation. It brought me to tears.
Profile Image for Pam  Page.
1,367 reviews
February 1, 2024
This book has it all: a good mystery to the very end, VERY quirky characters that you will not forget, an LA setting, and humor sprinkled throughout. I cannot count the number of times I shook my head and thought, "What????". Such a great book - very worthy of all of the press it is receiving! Be sure to read the author's note at the end.
Profile Image for Cheryl.
2,426 reviews68 followers
January 24, 2024
I loved this fast-paced L.A. thriller. It was told by four different main characters in alternating short chapters, which held my interest and made the pages zoom by.

The storyline is about a serial killer that was active in the 1970s but was never caught. There is also a true crime series in the works in Hollywood about the serial killer, a "wrongly" accused killer just released from prison, a retired cop and his ex-wife who does genealogy research, and a newly diagnosed young girl with leukemia.

All of these pieces fit together into a compelling story that was great fun to read. I highly recommend it. I enjoyed it so much that I downloaded two of the author's other books to read - Canary and Revolver. I hope I like them as much.

I received this book from Mulholland Books through Net Galley in the hopes that I would read it and leave an unbiased review. This is that review.
Profile Image for Mike Collins.
18 reviews2 followers
February 3, 2024
I got to meet Duane when I was producing content for a pop culture website. We were both from Philly, of similar age and background. I’m a huge fan of his twisty caper novels. California Bear is a love letter to the daughter he lost way too early. A fantastic twist and turn til the end. Duane’s afterward is a fitting note. I’m glad he’s back.
Profile Image for Kelly.
320 reviews4 followers
March 9, 2025
Great book! I enjoyed every single bit of it. Characters are all perfectly imperfect, except for The Girl Detective who is absolutely perfect. This will almost assuredly be one of my favorite books of the year. Read it!
Profile Image for Steph.
2,174 reviews92 followers
April 10, 2024
I didn’t think I would like this novel as much as I did. I thought it would just be ‘ok’, especially since this is my first novel from Swierczynski. But I grew to really like the characters a great deal, and I got all wrapped up in their capers. I also had no idea what was coming next, who was doing what, or what the big reveals would be, before they happened, so I was thrilled about this! I am definitely going to have to read more of this author’s novels in the future, I now see. I hope they are just as good.
I especially loved how Mathilda explained chemotherapy to her father in such a way that it totally made sense to me, and was darkly funny. Thank you for that.

The narrators for the audiobook version of this novel are James Urbaniak and Jesse Vilinsky. They were both superb, and I hope to hear them each narrate again soon in more audiobooks. Urbaniak is new to me, and only has three audiobooks in my local library, which is a bummer. But Vilinsky I have enjoyed before, especially in Wilder Girls by Rory Power, and Clown in a Cornfield by Adam Cesare. Thank you Hachette Audio for the wonderful work on this audiobook, and kudos to all those involved in this endeavor.

**The author narrates his own Afterward. In it, he tells about how this novel was supposed to be a jab at the “True Crime Industry”. He had read an article in the L.A. times about a ex- cop who overturned the Wrongful conviction of a man who spent 40 years in prison, for two murders he did not commit. The former felon went on to live with the ex cop and his wife at their beach house once he got out. So Swierczynski wanted to use something like this, in this novel. So he started writing this novel.

Swierczynski and his wife’s daughter Evie found out she had leukemia in late May, 2018, about a month later. Evie was about the same age as Mathilda is, at the time. But Evie unfortunately passed away in October of 2018.
Swierczynski had started writing this novel as an escape hatch, from everything, while staying with his daughter in the hospital. The character Mathilda was “pure Evie”, he states, “facing the unknown with incredible strength, in humor and grace.”
For a time, Swierczynski could not write, after losing their daughter. Eventually, the author was able to start writing again. And thank goodness he did. I know how difficult mourning a loved one can be, and how it takes the place of everything you once found joy in. Please take care, sir and ma’am.

This novel, and the afterward are a beautiful tribute to their beloved daughter. The passing of their child compels me to yell, ‘FUCK CANCER’, and I sincerely hope that the Swierczynski’s don’t mind me doing so, here. I’ve lost many a family member and friend to cancer as well, and it’s a bitch. I sincerely hope we can find some kind of cure, some day…. Or something less hard on the system and body than chemo.

“Leukemia is like a broken photo copier inside your bones, she said. The stuff inside your bones - the marrow - produces three different kinds of cells. The marrow acts as a photo copier, making countless copies of these helpful cells. They fight off infections, and keep you healthy. But leukemia is like some asshole who decides to high jack the photocopier and print copies of their butt. Sounds like fun, but it’s not.
Imagine a business with a photocopier, and after a while the photocopier prints nothing but copies of some guy’s butt. Eventually, said business would fail. So the idea is to fix the photocopier, but in practice, this means practically burning the company down to the ground, and starting from scratch. All in the hopes that when you open for business again, you’ve effectively rid yourself of the employee making all the butt photocopies. If it doesn’t work, and if you see even a few photocopies of someone’s ass, you burn the company down to the ground and start over again.”

💖💖💖 Fly high Evelyn Swierczynski. 💖💖💖

More info here: https://www.teameviefoundation.com/

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