New Hampshire Humanities BIG READ event this year, 2023, is the discussion of Author Andrew Krivak’s “The Bear”. The local librarian is enthusiastically encouraging us to join in the BIG READ. Well, how could I say no?
I thoroughly enjoyed Krivak’s 2017 “The Signal Flame”, finding it a 5-star read. Like “Signal Flame”, “The Bear” is a quiet, passive, pensive, and beautifully written story. Krivak utilizes minimalist writing hauntingly.
In “The Bear” a father and his daughter are surviving in the mountains somewhere in the USA. From the first sentence in the novel, the reader learns that they are the last two. They live “along the old eastern range on the side of a mountain they called the mountain that stands alone”. The father teaches his young daughter to read the stars, to tell time based upon the lunar cycle. He teaches her what plants to forage, how to hunt.
During a journey to find salt, the man dies, and the animals refer to the daughter as “the last one”. The father taught the daughter to listen to the forest, to listen to the wind. To pay mind to the feel of the breeze. He taught her to be a survivalist, for he knew she would one day be alone.
From the title, I assumed a bear would be involved, and I was correct. My favorite part, though, is that Krivak anthropomorphized the bear. As an avid dog lover/owner/admirer, I do the same. Author Jane Smiley writes books effectively doing the same. I’m a big fan of the anthropomorphized read. This bear, though, is more of a wise elder, not a whimsically amusing pet. Through the bear, the connection between animals and humans becomes evident. More animals get involved in assisting the young girl in her quest to return to her “home” so she can bury her father. Harmony between the animals and the girl is a strong message. Krivak shows that when we try to work within the laws of nature, and for the greater good, all can benefit.
In a personal note, Krivak stated that this story began as a bedtime story to his young children. He and his family have a second home on a pond in New Hampshire, and he utilizes the landscape as his backdrop to his story. He states, in the note, that it was his observations of nature while in the New Hampshire woods that inspired his love of the environment and the ideas for this novel. He states, “By calling the novel The Bear, I am suggesting that there is hope all around us, if we step back and see ourselves as part of—not the center of—a larger, ever more beautiful and animate world.”
I hope this novel inspires many to go out in nature, unplug, listen, look, smell, and learn.