When a twelve-year-old wakes up as a human girl-instead of a bear-one cloudy morning, she embarks on a thrilling journey through both mortal and immortal worlds...to mend her past, face her fears, and save all of the realms in which she treads.
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Not just for Fantasy Fans,
By
This review is from: Bear Daughter (Paperback)
Heroic quests are not my favorite reading material: blood and guts, the underworld, all that death. Yet I've been taken with this daring revision of the genre, inspired by Native American myth but drawing as much on the realm of magic and the fantastic. The heroine is Cloud, twelve years old, who wakes one morning transformed, in Berman's sly inversion of Kafka, from a powerful grizzly bear into a girl. Cloud encountering her strange new body introduces one of the story's preoccupations: the difficulty of claiming all parts of herself, from delicate human fingers to the animal thirst for fresh blood. Berman's exploration of this theme is often tenderly humorous, sometimes startling, never trite.
Bear Daughter is a riveting fantasy with an array of wizards, plot twists, and yes, heroic quest conventions. It's hard to put down. But Berman's up to more than just a page-turner here with her bear-girl on a quest. Bear Daughter is a foray not just into the mythic and actual past of the Northwest coast, but into a fantastic ecology that reveals a piercing clarity regarding the destructive and redemptive powers of the natural world. The world of Bear Daughter comes alive--the orcas and salmon that Berman describes are gorgeous renditions of the inhabitants of the Northwest waters. At the same time, this landscape is a shifting, eerie, interior world, reflecting the emotionally chaotic path of the young heroine, resisting her destiny almost every step of the way. You will find this novel classified as science fiction/fantasy, but it should find enthusiastic readers interested in women's issues, nature, myth or just a really good read.
4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
A true American fantasy,
By BobbyF "Nantucket reader" (East Coast USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Bear Daughter (Paperback)
Bear Daughter evokes American Indian myth and lore of the Pacific Northwest, an unmined and ignored realm, and Berman knows her stuff. This is rich in detail and fully realized, with a young adult story line that is so true of heart, so honest in its emotional textures that it should appeal to any fiction reader. There's been a good deal of talk about where fantasy should go after Potter, and back to Narnia and more Brit Isles sorcery settings is a stale move. Let me profess this...Bear Daughter offers a truly original direction. A must read. And a must tell your friends.
3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Innovative Native American Fantasy,
By
This review is from: Bear Daughter (Paperback)
Bear Daughter is a book that renews my faith in the fantasy genre. Fantasy so often seems stuck in the Northern/Western European rut, reworking the same legends and material over and over. Author Judith Berman is a card-carrying anthropologist who uses cultures of the Pacific Northwest as the material for this tale of a girl's journey.
One day a bear wakes up to find she has become a girl. It turns out that her mother is a human woman and her father is a deity in bear form. After spending her childhood as a bear, her bear form falls away and she is suddenly a girl on the brink of womanhood. Her mother's people name her Cloud, and she begins the task of learning to be human. However, she is troubled by dreams, and is driven by internal and external circumstances to address the cause of her recurrent dreams. All this takes place in a very realistically depicted Pacific Northwest Native American community, with traditions and practices that ring true. The author doesn't clobber the reader with her scholarship - rather it adds richness to every aspect of the story. Similarly, Berman is not constrained by her material, but is able to use it as a point of departure for her craft, creating new settings that are consistent with the cultures she knows well, but are new. The subject of the book is a young adult, but this is not an easy read. The topics are no gnarlier than most young adult books cover, but Cloud's journey is a complex one. No doubt her trials will seem more immediate to a younger reader, but this is a book for adults to enjoy just as much.
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