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  • Published: 2 January 2015
  • ISBN: 9780099581468
  • Imprint: Vintage
  • Format: Paperback
  • Pages: 304
  • RRP: $19.99

The Bear




Mummy never yells. Mostly not ever. Except sometimes.

Longlisted for the Women's Fiction Prize

Mummy never yells. Mostly not ever. Except sometimes.

Anna is five. Her little brother, Stick, is almost three. They are camping with their parents in Algonquin Park, in three thousand square miles of wilderness. It's the perfect family trip. But then Anna awakes in the night to the sound of something moving in the shadows. Her father is terrified. Her mother is screaming. Then, silence.

Alone in the woods, it is Anna who has to look after Stick, battling hunger and the elements to stay alive. Narrated by Anna, this is white-knuckle storytelling that captures the fear, wonder and bewilderment of our worst nightmares - and the power of one girl's enduring love for her family.

  • Published: 2 January 2015
  • ISBN: 9780099581468
  • Imprint: Vintage
  • Format: Paperback
  • Pages: 304
  • RRP: $19.99

About the author

Claire Cameron

Claire Cameron is a novelist and writer, whose work has appeared in the New York Times, Globe and Mail, and The Rumpus. She lives in Toronto with her husband and two children.

Praise for The Bear

A hauntingly beautiful novel about the unspoken bond between mothers and children

Miriam Toews

A taut and touching story of how a child’s love and denial become survival skills

Charlotte Rogan, author of The Lifeboat

Read this book in one sitting...taut and engrossing look at an essential web of connected questions: How children think, how families work, how we relate to nature at its most brutal and how we process grief and trauma... Unforgettable.

Globe and Mail

An emotional tour de force. Claire Cameron’s The Bear offers us an unforgettable child-narrator who propels us through a story as unsettling as it is bone-chilling, and as suspenseful as it is moving

Megan Abbott, author of Dare Me and The End of Everything

Claire Cameron has written a chilling, beautiful, voice-driven novel, one that will turn your blood cold, make you laugh, and remind you of all the ways you are human. Most importantly she honors the complexity of our relationship with nature, the ways we are humbled by it and tethered to it. A vivid, potent, and unforgettable novel

Mary Mayhew Bergman, author of Birds of a Lesser Paradise

Claire Cameron plunges us in to the dark terrors of the wilderness. The Bear is a survival story that is heart-pounding and moving. I devoured this book

Tanis Rideout, author of Above All Things

A harrowing and endlessly hopeful novel… [Cameron’s] assured evocation of soon-to-be-six-year-old Anna hits all the right notes. We witness the unfolding of events through Anna’s eyes while simultaneously watching over her small shoulder, hearts in our mouths

Alissa York, author of Fauna

The Bear faultlessly captures the wonder, bewilderment, fear and self-centeredness of five-year-old Anna, and beautifully balances the darkness of her tale with a hopeful, sensitively told back story and moments when she grasps her situation with just enough clarity to shoulder her burden

Cathy Marie Buchanan, author of The Painted Girls

Harrowing suspense. The Bear is a survival thriller that is told from a child's-eye point-of-view, which is not only convincing but doubles the tension. A heartbreaking, white-knuckle read

Andrew Pyper, author of The Demonologist

Thrilling and harrowing…. I couldn’t put this book down. And I must say that the ending was so right, I caught myself holding my breath. A remarkable novel

Anthony de Sa, author of Kicking the Sky

Stylistically impressive and deeply moving

Glamour

Any contemporary writer depicting extreme events through the eyes of a child must contend with the formidable precedent of Emma Donoghue’s Room, and Cameron bears the comparison.…She crafts a more straightforward adventure with a narration that nicely captures an ordinary child’s way of thinking

Kirkus

A fast, compelling read for nature lovers

Library Journal

So gripping that it is hard to put the novel down.

The Columbus Dispatch, Ohio

This expertly crafted novel could do for camping what Jaws did for swimming.This agonizing odyssey of loss and being lost also has humor…The book’s anguished yet hopeful ending provides a touching terminus for Anna and Stick’s journey to adulthood

People

Emotionally raw and deftly astute…. moving and uplifting. You’ll probably find yourself reading this amazing survival story well into the night.

Pure Wow Books

A gripping, affecting story that reads like a hybrid of Henry James's What Maisie Knew and Margaret Atwood's Survival

Maclean's

It's been a long time since I read a book like The Bear by Claire Cameron. By chapter three, my heart was in my mouth; by chapter eight I was weeping and drinking hot, sweet tea as I went through a box of tissues. Read this book in one, you won't want to put it down.

Bookmunch

This terrifying novel is your worst nightmare – in a good way!

The Sun

A gripping, affecting story that reads like a hybrid of Henry James's What Maisie Knew and Margaret Atwood's Survival

Maclean's Magazine

Just when you thought it was safe to go into the forest... This expertly crafted novel could do for camping what Jaws did for swimming

People

A gripping tale of how to deal with grief and being lost in a hostile environment

Roddy Brooks, UK Press Syndication

Subtle, endearing and raw

Clare Brierley, Nudge

Bold...shocking...distinctive...the reward is striking images that stick in the mind, a blend of Anna's interpretations of events and the reader's imagination. It was even more haunting the second time around

Independent

The Bear had me up all night... Claire Cameron is an absolute master

Herman Koch, Author of The Dinner

Based on real-life events, this book is unforgettable

Helena Gumley-Mason, Lady

A tender, terrifying, poignant ride

O magazine