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THE BEAR

Claire Cameron

In a nail-biter of psychological suspense told by a six-year-old in a voice reminiscent of ROOM, two small children are left alone at a remote island campground when their parents are attacked by a bear.
Algonquin Park consists of nearly three thousand square miles of wilderness situated 250 miles northeast of Toronto. It is a popular destination for campers, hikers, and canoeists. When in 1991 a couple who went on a camping trip there failed to return, friends contacted the police. Their partially eaten remains were found, with a large male black bear standing guard over them. There is no clear reason for what happened. Attacks by healthy black bears are extremely rare.

Claire Cameron has imagined what might have transpired if the couple had brought small children with them. Algonquin grabs you by the throat and will not let you go. Written by an author who has much experience of both wilderness survival and motherhood, it is a brilliant examination of how children help each other and themselves in such circumstances — a sort of rebuttal to Lord of the Flies.

Born in 1973, Claire Cameron grew up in Toronto. She studied History and Culture at Queen's University. She then worked as an instructor for Outward Bound, teaching mountaineering, climbing, and white-water rafting in Oregon. Next she worked in San Francisco for Pearson Plc before moving to London in 1999. There she was until recently director of Shift Media, a consultancy whose clients included the BBC, McGraw-Hill, and Oxford University Press. Her first novel, the taut thriller The Line Painter, is followed by the challenging and suspenseful Algonquin. Claire lives in Toronto with her husband and two sons.
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Book

Published 2014-02-01 by Doubleday

Book

Published 2014-02-01 by Doubleday

Comments

US: Reagan Arthur Books/Little, Brown UK: Harvill Secker/ Random House UK CAN: Doubleday Netherlands: Cargo/De Bezige Bij Brazilian Portuguese: Bertrand Brasil/Grupo Editorial Record Turkey: Nefes Yayinevi Vietnam: Skybook France: Kero Italy: SEM

The Inspiration Behind Claire Cameron’s The Bear Read more...

Intensity, as well as Anna's voice, make reading this book a challenging but ultimately uplifting experience

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.

The Bear had me up all night, and when I finally put it down I knew that I wouldn't forget Anna and her little brother Stick for a long time. Claire Cameron is an absolute master in letting us feel grief and loss by never using those words. The ending is very moving and offers us real consolation at the same time.

Harrowing.… a sort of youngster stream of consciousness… There’s touchingly voiced courageousness here… From the conception to the execution, the book is an exploration of anguish from a child’s point of view, shaded and shaped by Cameron.

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.

Film rights to THE BEAR by Claire Cameron, a novel about two children left alone in the bush after their parents are killed by a bear, have been optioned by Australian producer and director John Tatoulis Read more...

A gripping survival thriller ... [an] agonizing odyssey of loss and being lost also has humour. The book’s anguished yet hopeful ending provides a touching terminus for Anna and Stick’s journey to adulthood. This expertly crafted novel could do for camping what Jaws did for swimming.

The Bear is a taut and touching story of how a child's love and denial become survival skills. Claire Cameron takes a fairytale situation of children pitted against the wilderness, removes the fairies, and adds a terrifying and ravenous bear. I devoured this wonderful new novel in one day—if I can use the word ‘devoured’ for a book about a bear.

Claire Cameron on her novel The Bear. Read more...