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A Bear Named Trouble [Library Binding]

Marion Dane Bauer (Author)
4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (4 customer reviews)

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Book Description

Ten-year-old Jonathan practically lives at the Anchorage Zoo, where his father is a keeper. He loves animals, and even imagines himself inside their bodies, seeing what they see, feeling what they feel.

Meanwhile, a young brown bear is wandering through the woods near Anchorage, alone and hungry. One night, while searching for food, the bear crosses paths with Jonathan, who eagerly follows him onto the zoo grounds.

But when the bear accidentally kills Mama Goose, Jonathan’s favorite zoo creature, the boy loses the empathy he had felt earlier. He wishes that the bear—now nicknamed Trouble—would meet the same fate as his beloved goose, and he impulsively takes steps to make sure that happens.

Based on an actual incident, and told in alternating chapters from the bear’s and Jonathan’s points of view, this is both an involving animal story and a thought-provoking investigation into the consequences of one’s actions.
--This text refers to the Hardcover edition.

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Editorial Reviews

From School Library Journal

Grade 3-6–Bauer creates a fictionalized account of a real Alaska brown bear's early life, told from his perspective (in italics) and that of a 10-year-old boy. A young, injured bear breaks into Anchorage's Alaska Zoo one night. He has become acclimated somewhat to humans and is therefore considered a nuisance and is a candidate for termination. The zookeeper's son, Jonathan, witnesses Trouble killing a beautiful goose, one of the zoo's main attractions for children. Now, he must grapple with his sadness at the loss of his favorite animal, his anger at Trouble, and his understandings of wild animals and their instinctive behaviors. Jonathan comes to realize that the bear is only guilty of being a bear, and he stages a heroic effort to spare his life. In the epilogue, readers learn that Trouble is currently living at the zoo in Duluth, MN. With a strong plot, well-developed characters, and an engaging writing format, this book is a great choice for young readers.–Laurel L. Iakovakis, Douglas County Libraries, Castle Rock, CO
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved. --This text refers to the Hardcover edition.

From Booklist

Gr. 3-6. The author of Runt (2002) offers another story of animals in the wild, this one based on true events. Ten-year-old Jonathan and his father have relocated to Anchorage, where Dad is the new zookeeper. Jonathan, who has a great affinity for animals, has developed the ability to imagine himself inside their bodies, seeing and feeling as they do. He is drawn to a wild brown bear cub, luring it with food and then following as it digs its way into the zoo and, inadvertently, kills Mother Goose, a popular zoo animal. Told from the alternating perspectives of Jonathan and the cub, the tale explores the need for companionship and the importance of accepting the consequences of one's actions. Although it seems odd that Jonathan is not more afraid of the bear, Bauer's characters are well drawn, and the story will have great appeal for young animal lovers. Pair it with Daniel Pennac's Eye of the Wolf (2003), another novel about close child-animal connections. Kay Weisman
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved --This text refers to the Hardcover edition.

Product Details

  • Library Binding: 120 pages
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1435288432
  • ISBN-13: 978-1435288430
  • Product Dimensions: 7.8 x 5.2 x 0.5 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 5.8 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (4 customer reviews)

More About the Author

Marion Dane Bauer is the author of more than eighty books for young people, ranging from novelty and picture books through early readers, both fiction and nonfiction, books on writing, and middle-grade and young-adult novels. She has won numerous awards, including several Minnesota Book Awards, a Jane Addams Peace Association Award for RAIN OF FIRE, an American Library Association Newbery Honor Award for ON MY HONOR, a number of state children's choice awards and the Kerlan Award from the University of Minnesota for the body of her work.

She is also the editor of and a contributor to the ground-breaking collection of gay and lesbian short stories, Am I Blue? Coming Out from the Silence.

Marion was one of the founding faculty and the first Faculty Chair for the Master of Fine Arts in Writing for Children and Young Adults program at Vermont College of Fine Arts. Her writing guide, the American Library Association Notable WHAT'S YOUR STORY? A YOUNG PERSON'S GUIDE TO WRITING FICTION, is used by writers of all ages. Her books have been translated into more than a dozen different languages.

She has six grandchildren and lives in St. Paul, Minnesota, with her partner and a cavalier King Charles spaniel, Dawn.

-------------------------------------
INTERVIEW WITH MARION DANE BAUER
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Q. What brought you to a career as a writer?

A. I seem to have been born with my head full of stories. For almost as far back as I can remember, I used most of my unoccupied moments--even in school when I was supposed to be doing other "more important" things--to make up stories in my head. I sometimes got a notation on my report card that said, "Marion dreams." It was not a compliment. But while the stories I wove occupied my mind in a very satisfying way, they were so complex that I never thought of trying to write them down. I wouldn't have known where to begin. So though I did all kinds of writing through my teen and early adult years--letters, journals, essays, poetry--I didn't begin to gather the craft I needed to write stories until I was in my early thirties. That was also when my last excuse for not taking the time to sit down to do the writing I'd so long wanted to do started first grade.

Q. And why write for young people?

A. Because I get my creative energy in examining young lives, young issues. Most people, when they enter adulthood, leave childhood behind, by which I mean that they forget most of what they know about themselves as children. Of course, the ghosts of childhood still inhabit them, but they deal with them in other forms--problems with parental authority turn into problems with bosses, for instance--and don't keep reaching back to the original source to try to fix it, to make everything come out differently than it did the first time. Most children's writers, I suspect, are fixers. We return, again and again, usually under the cover of made-up characters, to work things through. I don't know that our childhoods are necessarily more painful than most. Every childhood has pain it, because life has pain in it at every stage. The difference is that we are compelled to keep returning to the source.

Q. You write for a wide range of ages. Do you write from a different place in writing for preschoolers than for young adolescents?

A. In a picture book or board book, I'm always writing from the womb of the family, a place that--while it might be intruded upon by fears, for instance--is still, ultimately, safe and nurturing. That's what my own early childhood was like, so it's easy for me to return to those feelings and to recreate them.
When I write for older readers, I'm writing from a very different experience. My early adolescence, especially, was a time of deep alienation, mostly from my peers but in some ways from my family as well. And so I write my older stories out of that pain, that longing for connection. A story has to have a problem at its core. No struggle, no story. And so that struggle for connection has become the central experience of all my older fiction. It's what gives my stories heart and meaning.

Q. How does your Newbery Honor novel, On My Honor, fit with that pattern of writing about alienation and connection?

A. It would be easy to say that On My Honor is different from my other novels in that it was the first story I ever drew from a real event. Having a friend drown in a river wasn't something that happened to me, but it happened to a friend of mine when we were twelve or thirteen. When I heard about the incident at the time I felt it in a visceral way. What would it be like to have a choice I made turn into something so terrible and to know that I could never do anything to make the situation right? I wondered. That's where I started when I began writing the story, with the two boys on their bikes heading toward the river, everything about to go terribly wrong. Very quickly, though, I realized that while I had a clear story problem, the drowning, I had no solution for the problem . . . unless I was going to bring Tony back to life, and I wasn't writing that kind of story. At that point I instinctively backed up and started again. This time I began with Joel, the main character, asking his father's permission to bike with his friend Tony out to the state park, something Tony is pressuring him to do and which Joel is hoping his father will forbid. His father, not understanding the situation, gives permission, and Joel is furious . . . alienated. Once I had that opening, the frame for my story was set. Alienation in the opening, reconciliation at the end. The reconciliation can't change the fact of Tony's death, but it gives closure and comfort. So it fits the usual pattern for my novels. (Perhaps I should note that I didn't do any of this consciously. I wasn't saying, "I write about alienation and reconnection. How can I fit that in here?" I just reached for events that made the story feel right for me, and those were the ones to present themselves.)

Q. You often write animal stories: Ghost Eye, Runt, A Bear Named Trouble, and now Little Dog, Lost is about to come out. Is there any particular reason that you write about animals?

A. The first reason I write about animals is because animals touch a deep chord in my own psyche. I have always been fascinated by the pets that share my life, by watching their minds work, by noting their emotions, by feeling the life that pulses through them. So writing about animals just feels right. But I write about animals, also, because animal stories are universal. If I'm writing about a twelve-year-old boy it is assumed that I'm writing for other ten, eleven, twelve-year-old boys. If I'm writing about a cat, a wolf, a bear, a dog, I'm writing for everyone . . . even adults, even myself. Perhaps especially myself.

Q. You are known as a writing teacher as well as a writer. How to you find a balance between teaching and writing?

A. I have taught for many years, though I'm retired from teaching now except for occasional very time-limited stints. My most recent teaching was through the Vermont College of Fine Arts in their MFA in Writing for Children and Young Adults program. But I have taken care to make sure my primary time and energy were devoted to my own writing. I made sure I was a writer who teaches, not a teacher who writes.

Q. How has teaching writing impacted your own development as a writer?

A. Being a writing teacher has, of course, sharpened my skills as a critic. You can't say to a developing writer, "Your story doesn't work." You have to tell her what specifically doesn't work and why and then, without intruding, give suggestions about what the next step might be in strengthening that story. Having, again and again, to define with thought and care what is needed in other writers' work brings me back to my own work with deepened insights. Eventually, I teach myself what I'm teaching others, and having said it to others makes it easier to hear for myself. One time my partner, who was not a writer herself but who had heard me speak to writers on a number of occasions, read an early draft of one of my stories and said, "Wouldn't you say . . . to one of your students?" And . . . was exactly what that story needed, so I learned from myself through her.

Q. You've been writing stories for young people for more than forty years, and you've mentioned that you keep playing out some of the same deep themes. How do you manage to keep your work fresh?

A. One of the things that keeps my work fresh is moving between different genres. A picture book requires such different energy than a young novella, and a different rhythm, too. A young novella has a different rhythm and energy than an older novel. Nonfiction is its own experience. Moving between the various demands of the various kinds of work keeps me from ever settling into a rut. When I'm writing a young chapter book, a chapter is about five pages long. It's just a natural shape those younger stories fall into. And I love climbing into a chapter knowing I can, very quickly, climb out again. But then when I turn to an older novel where chapters can be much longer, I love equally settling in and fleshing my world out, stretching. One of my most recent books, a novella called Little Dog, Lost, moves into the territory of fiction in verse, something entirely new for me. I took such pleasure in writing that story because I had to discover how to do what I was doing at every step along the way. Even after more than 80 books published, everything about that story felt fresh because the way I was presenting it was fresh for me.

Q. What is your deepest motivation in writing for children?

A. I entered the field with a single passion ... to be a truth teller. I grew up in at a time when children were routinely lied to, lies of omission--information we were carefully shielded from--as much as overt untruths. And my mother, while certainly well intentioned, was probably better than most both at shielding and at lying to "protect" me. When I grew old enough to understand the ways I'd been lied to, I was furious. And I was also determined not to follow the same path in dealing with children myself, my own children or the ones I wrote for. Children are far less apt to be shielded from basic information these days. In fact, they are bombarded through the media with what may be a too explicit view--certainly too skewed and dark a view--of the world they are entering. But they still need the deep realities of the life that stands before them--the pain of it and the hope--to be interpreted in a straightforward and wise way. That's what my stories attempt to do, to tell the truth as I know it. It's truth with a small t, of course, because it is my truth, not something handed down from on high, but it's the very best of what I have to bring to the page.

Q. Finally, you've been writing and teaching for a long time. You have retired from teaching. Do you expect to retire from writing some day?

A. I hope not. I hope to be able to continue writing as long as my brain still works. It's like breathing. It's not just what I do for a livelihood. It's what I do to live.

 

Customer Reviews

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Average Customer Review
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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars "Have you ever come face to face with a lonely brown bear?, December 3, 2005
By 
SG (Illinois) - See all my reviews
This review is from: A Bear Named Trouble (Hardcover)
Have you ever come face to face with a lonely brown bear?
10 year old Jonathan does. Jonathan lives with his Father who is a new keeper at the Alaska zoo. Jonathan is lonely and longs for his Mother and sister who have delayed moving with the family to Alaska so that his mother, a teacher, could finish the school term. There are many children in today's global marketplace who deal with being separated from parents because of their parents jobs demand travel or relocation. I thought the author dealt with this separation very well in developing the comparisons between a lonely young brown bear who is shunned by his mother and young Jonathan who longs for his own Mother and the security of his family together. The author also sends her young readers a message that moving to a new community is not the worst thing that could happen to a family. Jonathan loves animals and because he is "a new kid" and adjusting to his new surroundings he spends a lot of his free time at the zoo. He especially enjoys playing a game he and his sister invented where he imagines himself inside the animals becoming what they see and feel. Then he describes what he has imagined in every detail for his sister who is handicapped. The way Jonathan cares for his handicapped sister is touching and helps us to understand the depth of his young character. Jonathan is devastated when "Momma Goose" one of his favorite animal friends is killed by a wild brown bear when after it broke into the zoo. Jonathan is angry and wants to avenge his goose friend's death. After investigating the troublesome visiting bear, Alaska department of Fish and Game decide the wild bear is too dangerous and must be put down. Jonathan faces the bitter reality of his revenge and then puts himself in danger to help his father save the bear. In the end "trouble the bear is relocated to a zoo and is placed in a habitat where he is next to another bear.
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Excellent!, December 11, 2006
By 
This review is from: A Bear Named Trouble (Paperback)
A Bear Named Trouble is a book that even I couldn't put down! My daughter and I started reading it at night before bed and while we normally read one chapter a night, it didn't happen with this book. Two or three chapters later, I'd finally say it was time for lights out. The storyline is fabulous and since Trouble is a real bear at the Lake Superior Zoo, it gives it a whole new meaning for readers. It was fun to finish the book, learn that Trouble is real and research him at the zoo's website. I recommend this book for any animal lover out there and I look forward to reading more by Marion Dane Bauer.
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3.0 out of 5 stars Based on an actual incident, June 7, 2011
By 
Darlene (Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: A Bear Named Trouble (Hardcover)
I read this book aloud to my daughters.

Overall, we enjoyed the book. My girls love anything and everything to do with animals, so I knew they would.

There were some strange parts of the book where Jonathan and his sister play a game where they try to imagine themselves inside the animals becoming what they see and feel. The parts of the book written where he is "inside" the animals is just weird, though. I am all for creativity and imagination, and that is not what I have a problem with; it is just the way that Bauer wrote those passages that just seems "weird" to me.

We have read other Bauer books that we have enjoyed more.
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