“In this thesis, part academic inquiry, part fairy tale and vision quest, I document a journey to Bear, whose teeth and claws will tear away the skin of this life, whose jaws are gateways to the next.”
Twenty-five-year-old Manchester graduate student Jade Hunter travels halfway across the world to attend a folklore conference in Fairbanks, Alaska, where she fails to register for the event and promptly disappears into the wilderness. Although her body is never discovered, eccentric survivalist Ursula Smith, who lives alone in an off-grid cabin, is quickly convicted of her murder. A few years later, catching a crime documentary about the case on late night TV, investigative reporter Carla Young sees something in the footage of Ursula’s cabin that compels her to dig deeper into the case.
Bear Season is presented in two main sections, Jade’s doctoral thesis, and the events surrounding Jade’s disappearance as related by the imprisoned Ursula to Carla, along with a prologue and epilogue. This is a short debut novella, and I devoured it in a day. The writing is beautiful, and each woman’s separate story, as well as the story of how they relate to one another, is engrossing. "Jade, Ursula and I were three points spinning in the ether, light years apart from each other yet with orbits overlapping, converging.”
There are allusions to folklore and fairy tales, there’s the mystery of Jade’s disappearance, and there’s the tragedy of the misunderstood Ursula: "'Insane’ women, who disrupt the feminine ideals of serene wives, doting mothers, and chaste daughters, perverting the model of nuclear family, have, throughout our nation’s history, been objects of fear and loathing.”
I loved all of the moving parts of this story, but I don’t want to say too much because it is so short, so all I can basically do is gush about it and hope that it maybe gets on the radar of some people who would appreciate it. I would say don’t read this, though, if you want straight-up horror or if you’re bothered by an ending that’s open to interpretation. I honestly found myself wishing this book was longer, I definitely think it could have been, and I hope to see more by the author soon.