Thursday, January 5, 2012

The Summer of the Bear, by Bella Pollen

Pages: 438

Rating: PG-13 (there's a little bit of sexual stuff, but it's very fleeting, and never graphic. There are a few swear words, I think the F-bomb was in there twice.)

Summary:
In 1980 Germany, under Cold War tension, a mole is suspected in the British Embassy. When the clever diplomat Nicky Fleming dies suddenly and suspiciously, it’s convenient to brand him the traitor. But was his death an accident, murder, or suicide? As the government digs into Nicky’s history, his wife, Letty, relocates with her three children to a remote Scottish island hoping to salvage their family. But the isolated shores of her childhood retreat only intensify their distance, and it is Letty’s brilliant and peculiar youngest child, Jamie, who alone holds on to the one thing he’s sure of: his father has promised to return and he was a man who never broke a promise.

Exploring the island, Jamie and his teenaged sisters discover that a domesticated brown bear has been marooned on shore, hiding somewhere among the seaside caves. Jamie feels that the bear may have a strange connection to his father, and as he seeks the truth, his father’s story surfaces in unexpected ways. Bella Pollen has an uncanny ability to capture the unnoticeable moments in which families grow quiet. A novel about the corrosive effects of secrets and the extraordinary imagination of youth, The Summer of the Bear is Pollen’s most ambitious and affecting book yet.

My Thoughts: I found this book difficult to put down. It was strangely compelling, like the whole thing is just a dream or something. I thought it would be more like a mystery novel, but it's really story of a grieving family trying to piece together how their father died, or in Jamie's case, why he is gone. To protect Jamie from the horror of death, no one officially tells him his father is dead. They say things like, "He's gone" and "He had an accident and he hurt everything." It's also a story of each individual in the family trying to deal with it and get past the fact that a key piece of their family is now gone. The story is told in small little chapters, and it rotates through the perspectives of each family member, sometimes reminiscing about events in the past, sometimes just telling how it is now.

I was a little confused about the bear because the story starts out with him and it wasn't obvious at first that the bear was narrating. It was a lot easier when I realized that the bear's chapters are marked by a little picture of a bear at the beginning of each of his narratives. That might be helpful. There also are elements of truth to the book. I don't think of this as a spoiler because I read it early on, and even though it's part of the epilogue, it helped me understand the story better. In 1980, there really was a tame grizzly bear lost on a Scottish Island for several weeks. Even though when he was finally found, he was extremely thin and weak with hunger, he had never harmed a single animal or human.

There are definitely twists and turns. I was completely in the dark about what really happened to their father until the very very end, and suddenly it all becomes clear. It's one of those books that just kind of touches you quietly and when you're done, you think, "Hey...that was a good book." I really enjoyed it.

One last warning... the book is written as if the readers are familiar with British terms and phrases, so just watch out cuz you might be slightly confused with some terms. I was. It helps to know that MoD stands for Ministry of Defense. They don't explain that right away.

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