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The winner of the Governor General's Literary Award for Fiction, Marian Engel's most famous – and most controversial – novel tells the unforgettable story of a woman transformed by a primal, erotic relationship. Lou is a lonely librarian who spends her days in the dusty. Novelists such as Fred Bodsworth, Sheila Watson, Marian Engel,. Increasingly urbane literature in the Canadian imaginative landscape may bear out. Marianbeartrailmap.pdf - Similar Ebooks: marian bear memorial park. Engel.pdf - Similar Ebooks: ein engel? Ursprung engel 3. My interest focuses particularly on Canadian Marian Engel's Bear, where the writer tries to deal with unspeakable subjects between a woman and a bear:.

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A librarian is called to a remote Canadian island to inventory the estate of a secretive Colonel whose most surprising secret is a bear who keeps the librarian company--shocking company.
Published October 1st 2002 by David R. Godine Publisher (first published 1976)
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Best Books of the Decade: 1970's
1,505 books — 1,623 voters
100 Novels that Make You Proud To Be Canadian
128 books — 55 voters

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Mar 25, 2018Miranda Reads rated it did not like it · review of another edition
Shelves: my-eyes-oh-my-eyes, literally-painful-to-read, ohgoodlord-someone-is-going-to-hell, dumpster-fire
She f*cked a bear.
She literally f*cked a bear.
No. This isn't some euphemism for a beefy gay man.
She motherf*cking literallyf*cked a literal bear.
What. The. Hell.
Okay. So. I'm not a cultured reader. I read mostly YA and...well...that's about it. BUT, I am a reader. A layman reader. So, here is the review from a casual just-for-fun reader:
She f*cked a bear.
For the record: did I pick up this book knowing there will be bear-f*ckery? No.
I picked it because I wanted (for once) to read a nov
...more
Mar 11, 2010karen rated it really liked it · review of another edition
Shelves: icky-sex, upstairs-neighbors, books-are-dirrrrrrty
floating because the comments in this thread: http://imgur.com/gallery/uf3YE are killing me. ded.
first of all, i want to thank bill thompson, for sending me this book from canada. i also want to thank him specifically for sending me this cover, because it is totally hot and i got to upload it onto goodreads.com myself.
i am now prepared for the customer/patron question: 'do y'all have any books where a bear goes down on a lady??' yes. yes i do. but that's pretty reductive, even though the book i
...more
Nov 10, 2018Julie rated it liked it
Hmmm. . . what happens in Canada stays in Canada, eh?
What is it with you guys up there? Is it the solitude? The aurora borealis? The cold?
If I were to take Margaret Atwood seriously (and I do, oh, I do, I do, I do), y'all are transmuting into amoebas up there, giving birth in lakes to half-formed human/beavers.
And now there's this Lou in my life. Lou, the world's most boring librarian, sent up to a place called “Cary's Island” in Canada, to catalogue a library for her Institute.
In case it's uncl
...more
Aug 05, 2018Robin rated it really liked it · review of another edition
Shelves: canadian-lit, literary-fiction, 2018, governor-general-prize-winner, novella, erotica
O, 1976. O, Canada. O, living in the wilderness. O, sex with a bear.
Did I just say that? Lemme just re-read the line above. Yep, there it is. Sex with a bear.
God bless 1976, when a book about a lonely, bookish woman who, sent up to the northern Ontario wilderness for work, has sexy-times with a bear, wins the Governor General's Award. For those who don't know, this is Canada's most prestigious literary prize. It's like winning the Pulitzer, or Man Booker, in my country. Apparently, that year, Be
...more
Feb 09, 2012knig rated it really liked it
Is this a book where a Canadian woman called Lou smears honey on her labia minora and has a black bear lick it off? Yes.
Is this a book where Lou kneads the bear’s testicles and tries to mount the bear’s penis? Yes.
Is this a book where Lou falls in love with a bear? Yes.
Did Marian Engel win the Governor’s General Award for this book? Yes
Is this book about gratuitous bestiality? No.
Is this book about general bestiality, then? No. (Although clearly, ........).
So, what IS this book about, then?
Lou
...more
Jul 08, 2014Christina Marie marked it as to-read · review of another edition
Shelves: curiosity-made-me-read-it, becuase-imgur, for-research-purposes

After stumbling across this on imgur I feel like it's my duty to read this.
For research purposes.
I feel like I'm probably going to regret this decision.
LMAO THIS SOUNDS HORRIBLE AND GROSS
IM GONNA READ IT LADS
Jan 13, 2018Jenny (Reading Envy) rated it really liked it · review of another edition
Shelves: canada-alaska-2018, location-canada-ontario, own, read2018, around-the-world, location-canada, cold-weather-islands, librarianship
I read this book in a day then had to spend two more days in an attempt to understand it. I knew something was up when I, innocent reader, bought a book on the recommendation of a reader friend who is Canadian and knows what is UP about Canadian lit. I read the description, about the mousy librarian and her assignment to a tiny island to catalog an estate that has been donated, and thought it sounded like something I would really love. I noted that it won the Governor General's Literary Prize, w...more
Aug 04, 2018Lark Benobi rated it it was amazing · review of another edition
There is something so formal and restrained and lovely and lonely about this novella. Startling things happen, sure, but in such a matter-of-fact way that it hardly seems to be out of the ordinary when a human woman, somewhat late in the novella, begins to find passionate fulfillment in an erotic and increasingly risky relationship with a pet bear.
I'm overcome with delight at how Marian Engel portrayed these scenes. And I'm overcome with gratefulness at the way Engel refuses to anthropomorphize
...more
Nov 24, 2012TK421 rated it really liked it
Marian Engel's Governor General's Award winning novel, BEAR, is a unique little masterpiece.
Unfortunately, this novel seems to have been forgotten.
It opens when Lou, the main character, a librarian, is commissioned to catalog and research the life of an eccentric nineteenth century colonel in the wilds of Ontario. At first, Lou is uncertain she wants to be in such an isolated environment. But once she reaches the remote island house, and begins her cataloging and research, a peace falls upon h
...more
Nov 04, 2018Betsy Robinson rated it it was ok · review of another edition
Marian Engel Bear Pdf Download
Bear by Marian Engel
Lou, a cataloguer for a historical institute, is assigned to go live on an island in Northern Ontario where she will record all possessions in the estate of the late Colonel Jocelyn Cary, who has left her house and bear to the institute. Lou is a woman who, we are told, only feels purposeful and grounded by having instructions, but she ends up having sex with the bear, and through that, having unnamed guilt healed by having her back clawed, thereby experiencing a rebirth.
(I'l
...more
May 13, 2013Nate D rated it really liked it
Recommends it for: wilderness vacation reading, sort of
Shelves: read-in-2014, animal-lovers, canada, 70s-delerium, favorites
Wherein a youngish but isolated-in-her-modern-life archivist leaps at a chance to move into a different sort of isolation (cataloguing an estate library on a remote island) and bonds somewhat surreally-yet-unanthropomorphically-realistically with a certain member of the local semi-wildlife. The notes and asides delivered in slips of paper from the past, the setting, the hard deadpan 'reality' of the delivery are all handled perfectly. Especially the latter. In another book this would slip into a...more
Unconventional sex and sexuality interests me, as a general rule. What interests me most about novels that deal with taboo sex is not the taboo per se, although there is something to be said about reading descriptions of the forbidden that is erotic in and of itself. What I’m chiefly interested in is how taboo sex can answer questions about ourselves, and when we examine depictions of these forbidden encounters, strange intimacies, and abject eroticisms, there are things to be discovered that ca...more
Jul 18, 2010Jimmy rated it really liked it
Shelves: bear-bear, female, novel, canada, year-1970s, and-a-half-stars
Unlike most of the fiction titles in my bear-bear shelf (at least based on the blurbs), this one does not take the absurdist-magical-sur-realist route. Instead, it admirably goes the route of realism (or what we think of as realism), which is much harder considering the topic. How does a bookish woman end up falling in love and having sexual relations with a bear in any kind of believable fashion? And how do we end up falling for it, not even in a kitschy smirky superior way, but feeling for her...more
Aug 16, 2018Sean rated it really liked it · review of another edition

I have nothing to add to the mountain of words, both adulatory and damning, that have been written about this book, except that perhaps more than with any other book reviewed on this site, I wish that, freedom of speech be damned, I could delete other users' reviews.
For the love of reading, people, it's a novel.
Apr 25, 2017Silvia Moreno-Garcia added it · review of another edition
This poor book! The 1970s sextastic cover promises bear erotica, which has caused many chuckles because it's a an award-winning Canadian book so hahaha those crazy Canucks. In reality, it's a story of a woman finding herself in the wilderness. So if you were here for the sex, leave now.
The summary: A quiet, young librarian gets an assignment to catalogue a collection on a remote island. On the island she finds a tame bear and she begins to question herself about life, relationships and her prev
...more
Feb 26, 2016Carolyn rated it it was ok · review of another edition
Shelves: 2016, read-for-school, my-real-life-bookshelf
In Engel’s novel, Lou and Bear’s relationship is not consensual; many of their encounters are sexually abusive, verging on rape. As Margret Grebowicz argues in “When Species Meat: Confronting Bestiality Pornography,” “[h]ow might we begin to distinguish between the sexual agency we anthropomorphically project onto animals (in the production of porn, for instance) and their real sexual agency, the very thing which render them rapeable (at least in human legal terms) in the first place?” Because a...more
Dec 22, 2014Krista rated it really liked it · review of another edition
It was the night of the falling stars. She took him to the riverbank. They swam in the still, black water. They did not play. They were serious that night. They swam in circles around each other, very solemnly. Then they went to the shore, and instead of shaking himself on her, he lay beside her and licked the water from her body while she, on her back, let the stars fall, one, two, fourteen, a million, it seemed, falling on her, ready to burn her. Once she reached up to one, it seemed so close
...more
Feb 26, 2016Robert Wechsler rated it it was amazing · review of another edition

Marian Engel Bear Pdf Download Free

A true gem of a novella. Engel’s third-person limited narration and simple but elegant prose fit perfectly to this modern take on the fairy tale, complete with a woman, a bear, and a library in an octagonal house on an island in the deep woods of the north (Canada). The running commentary on the books and the notes in the library that the protagonist is archiving is wonderful. This novel has such a wonderful sense of balance, something its protagonist lacks. The narrator and the protagonist make...more
This review has been hidden because it contains spoilers. To view it, click here.
Sep 20, 2018Marcus Hobson rated it really liked it · review of another edition
First a big thanks to friends on Goodreads who have recently reviewed this book - Lark & Robin and others - without whom I would probably never have noticed this little masterpiece.
Thanks all, that is what Goodreads is all about.
So, what a beautiful story.
There are so many things to love about this story. For booklovers, even the premise that somewhere in a wilderness setting there is a beautiful old house full of antiques and books waiting to be discovered, or even catalogued, held and rea
...more
Jun 28, 2017Natasha Penney rated it really liked it
What a wonderful read! I don't know that I would have picked it up without a book group's challenge to read a 'book outside my comfort zone', but a protagonist engaging in bestiality certainly fit the description. But it ended up being so much more than shocking and shallow, which was almost what I was expecting. It's a strong feminist story about self-realization and empowerment, and the boundaries of personal power. It's an absorbing story and I'm happy to have given it a chance.
Jul 31, 2014Rhonda rated it liked it · review of another edition
So...
I read this book because there was an article about it floating around Facebook. I believe the actual title of that article was something like 'What the actual fuck, Canada?' because this is a book wherein a woman gets licked by a bear. Bear sex. And not of the hairy dude variety. Bear sex with an actual real bear. And what's more, it's an award-winning book with bear sex in it.
But it's not a book about bear sex.
The writing is beautiful. The sensory detail is phenomenal. There's a scene whe
...more
Sep 03, 2018Doug H rated it really liked it · review of another edition
I read this novel in my late teens (a few years after it was published) and remember being strongly impressed by it. Strangely enough, I remember its beautiful interior-looking writing balanced with detailed descriptions of nature (especially swarms of black flies) more than anything very graphic or gratuitous about the sex scenes (even as strange as they are). I generally dislike detailed sex scenes in novels so, now, many years later, I’m wondering if I’ve shut those scenes from my memory or i...more
Feb 29, 2016Britt MacKenzie-Dale rated it it was amazing
Lou is one of the great feminist heroes of literature. At once daring, philosophical, and deeply insightful, 'Bear' offers a gorgeously written rumination on sexuality, women, and what it means to be alone with oneself.
Jan 09, 2013Jeffrey Luscombe rated it it was amazing · review of another edition
A brilliant book and one of my favourites. When I was doing my MA at the University of Toronto, I went to McMaster University in Hamilton (who hold's Engel's personal letters) to do some research on her papers. Someone really should do a PhD on her correspondence.
Mar 27, 2017Megan rated it it was amazing
This book is brilliant. A look at a single woman in a patriarchal, misogynistic society, with a lagging career, a dysfunctional relationship with a married man, and a chance to break free and connect with herself through nature. This book is intense and sometimes uncomfortable. The writing is brilliant. Margaret Atwood and Margaret Laurence wrote positive reviews on the back cover. These two women have not steered me wrong yet. This book was no exception.
One takeaway from this award-winning classic is that the main character would rather get face from a bear than put her boyfriend's socks away one more time.
Favourite line: 'As long as she made her stool beside him in the morning, he was ready whenever she spread her legs to him.'
Mar 29, 2017Kelly rated it really liked it
Holy crickets, what have I done?
I admit I wanted to read this because I'd read some hi-larious reviews about the fact that it won the Governor General's Literary Award in Canada in 1976, which is noteworthy, since it's probably the highest award ever bestowed upon a novel in which a librarian has a tryst with a bear.
The surprise is that Bear is actually kind of good. There's some good writing, some deep characterization, a real sense of loneliness and longing that almost ... almost makes you t
...more
Jul 12, 2014Audrey marked it as not-for-me · review of another edition

You guys.
Look at this cover.
Read the description.
Look at Christina's review here: https://www.goodreads.com/review/show....
Then read this thing on tumblr: http://some-awkward-peacock.tumblr.co...
THEN say it with me...
WHAT THE ACTUAL FUCK?????
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Write Reads Podcast:Write Reads #31 Bear with Alexis Kienlen 1 8Sep 26, 2015 09:13AM
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Canadian novelist, short-story and children's fiction writer, Marian Engel was a passionate activist for the national and international writer’s cause.
She was the first chair of the Writer’s Union of Canada (1973–74) and helped found the Public Lending Right Commission. From 1975-1977, she served on the City of Toronto Book Award Committee (an award she won in 1981 for Lunatic Villas) and the Can
...more
“So this was her kingdom: an octagonal house, a roomful of books, and a bear.” — 6 likes
“She makes her little house to shine, she thought.” — 3 likes
More quotes…
Bear
AuthorMarian Engel
CountryCanada
LanguageEnglish
GenreFiction
Published1976
PublisherMcClelland & Stewart
Pages141
AwardsGovernor General's Literary Award,1976 – Fiction, English
ISBN9780771030802
OCLC2507467

Bear is a novel by Canadian author Marian Engel, published in 1976. It won the Governor General's Literary Award the same year. It is Engel's fifth novel, and her most famous. The story tells of a lonely librarian in northern Ontario who enters into a sexual relationship with a bear. The book has been called 'the most controversial novel ever written in Canada'.[1]

  • 2Synopsis

Background[edit]

The book was Engel's fifth novel, and her sixth piece of published writing. Engel studied under author Hugh MacLennan, finishing her Master's of Arts at McGill University in Montreal in 1957.[2] Her first novel, No Clouds for Glory, was released in 1968. She was awarded a Canada Council grant on the strength of the book, but had difficulty finding a publisher for her second novel, The Honeyman Festival. The book was published in 1970 by the new Toronto company House of Anansi Press, which would also put out another novel, Monodronos, and a collection of short stories, Inside the Easter Egg.[2]

The novel was written in a busy and tumultuous period in the author's life, a 'very crazy time' as described by Engel.[3] In 1973, Engel had started the Writers' Union of Canada (W.U.C.) from her home, and served as its first chairperson. Through the W.U.C., and her position on the board of trustees for the Toronto Public Library, she advocated for public lending rights for Canadian authors.[4] She was raising twins while undergoing a painful divorce. She took regular psychotherapy sessions, and worried about her mental health. Engel would end up dedicating the book to John Rich, her therapist.[5]

Engel started writing the novel to contribute to a W.U.C. collection of pornographic fiction by 'serious' writers.[6] The project was supposed to raise funds for the cash-strapped union, but did not make it to publication. Engel kept with her 31-page draft, and developed it into the 141-page novel.[4] She was partly inspired by the First Nations legend of The Bear Princess, as recorded by folklorist Marius Barbeau. The story was suggested to the writer by the Haida artist Bill Reid.[7] Early titles for the book included The Bear of Pennarth and The Dog of God.[8] The book was rejected when first sent to publishers. An editor with Harcourt Brace wrote in a rejection letter: 'Its relative brevity coupled with its extreme strangeness presents, I'm afraid, an insuperable obstacle in present circumstances.' Fellow Canadian author Robertson Davies praised the book to McClelland & Stewart editors, and Engel started a lifelong friendship with company president Jack McClelland. The first printing was released in Toronto in May 1976.[2]

Synopsis[edit]

The landscape of Algoma District, at the crossing of the Michipicoten River by Ontario Highway 17

Setting[edit]

The book takes place in the district of Algoma in northeastern Ontario. The area is heavily wooded, with a mix of deciduous and conifer forests. Part of the Canadian Shield, the district has many lakes and rivers. Almost all of the story takes place in or around an old, octagonal house on a small island on a remote lake. The location, 'Cary's Island' is fictitious, located north of Highway 17, past 'Fisher's Falls' and near a village called 'Brody'.[9]

The house and estate, previously belonging to the Cary family, whose patriarch fought in the Napoleonic Wars, is called 'Pennarth' (Welsh for 'Bear's head'). Its octagonal layout was inspired by the writings of Orson Squire Fowler, which dates the building to the 1850s.[10] The house is well-ordered and elaborate, and houses an extensive library of nineteenth century books. Outside are several outbuildings, including a shed that houses a large, semi-tame bear.[11]

Plot summary[edit]

The novel centers on Lou, a 27-year-old librarian given the task of documenting the house and library of Colonel Cary, which has been donated to her employer, the Heritage Institute. Escaping a dreary and unfulfilling life in Toronto, Lou revels in the opportunity to work in the solitude of Cary's Island. She studies and catalogues the library. Lou struggles with her emotional balance, and her relationship with her work. She slowly begins to approach the island's resident bear, who was a pet of the late Colonel.[12]

Lonely and isolated, Lou enters into a sporadic sexual relationship with the estate's caretaker, Homer Campbell. She becomes closer to the bear, aided by an elder First Nations woman, Lucy Leroy. Lucy advises Lou on how to gain the animal's confidence. As she delves deeper into the library, she finds scraps of bear folklore and studies collected by the Colonel. Her relationship with the bear becomes sexual, as well as spiritual. As her work comes to a finish, the bear scratches her deeply in the back. Her bond with the bear is altered, and Lou leaves the island with a sense of renewal.[12]

Reception[edit]

The Canadian Encyclopedia notes that the book has been called 'the most controversial novel ever written in Canada,'[1] and the notoriety around its subject matter brought Engel to national attention for the first time.[13] At its publication, the novel was mostly received well by critics. Engel's writing craft was admired, with The Globe and Mail noting her 'fine use of understatement, control, and economy.'[14] The book was received favorably outside of Canada as well; London's Times Literary Supplement wrote a positive review.[15] Exceptions included novelist and critic Scott Symons, who called the book 'spiritual gangrene... a Faustian compact with the Devil.'[5] The 1976 Governor General's Literary Award jury, which included authors Margaret Laurence, Alice Munro, and Mordecai Richler awarded Bear its English-language Fiction award, one of the highest literary prizes in the country.[5]

In 2014, the paperback cover became an Internet meme, thanks to a widely shared Imgur post titled 'WHAT THE ACTUAL FUCK, CANADA?'[16] This exposure led to a modern reappraisal of the 1970s novel, including new reviews, commentary, and a place in the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation's 2014 list 'Books That Make You Proud to Be a Canadian.'[16][17] A 2014 National Post review by literature critic Emily M. Keeler called the book 'the best Canadian novel of all time.'[18] Critic Aritha Van Herk, in an interview with CBC Radio's Q program, called the novel a 'quintessential Canadian book,' referencing the role of wilderness in Canadian lives.[19]

Publication history[edit]

McLelland & Stewart released the first edition in 1976. Atheneum Books released the first American edition. Several paperback editions were published by different imprints, including Seal and Pandora. The now-famous, Harlequin-like paperback cover depicts a partially nude female being embraced by a large bear. Its artist was not credited in the book; later investigation concluded the illustration was likely by veteran cover illustrator Fred Pfeiffer.[20] McClelland released a new edition under its 'New Canadian Library' series in 1990 with an afterword by Aritha Van Herk. A more recent American edition licensed from Atheneum was published in 2002 by David R. Godine, Publisher with a subtly provocative wood engraved illustration by Wesley Bates on the front cover and frontis, which has gone into 10 printings as of 2018. In August 2014, reacting to renewed interest in the novel, McClelland released a reprint of the New Canadian Library edition. Trying to avoid the sensationalism of the original paperback cover, Random House of Canada (which owns McClelland & Stewart) senior designer Five Seventeen designed several versions, finally deciding on a painting by American artist Mara Light. The painting depicts the back of a nude female; the designer added scratch marks, evoking an episode from the novel where Lou is injured by the bear.[20]

Notes[edit]

  1. ^ abCoates, Donna (2 June 2006). 'Bear (Novel)'. Canadian Encyclopedia. Historica Canada. Retrieved 5 February 2015.
  2. ^ abcGaray, Kathy. 'Marian Engel: A Life in Writing'. Historical Perspectives on Canadian Publishing. Hamilton, Ontario, Canada: McMaster University. Archived from the original on 10 October 2016. Retrieved 5 February 2015.
  3. ^Verduyn 1995, p. 120.
  4. ^ abVerduyn 1995, p. 119.
  5. ^ abcBynoe, Sara (14 August 2014). 'There's More to 'Bear' Than Bear Sex'. Hazlitt. Penguin Random House Canada. Retrieved 6 February 2015.
  6. ^New, William H. (2002). Encyclopedia of literature in Canada. Toronto, Ontario: University of Toronto Press. p. 333. ISBN9780802007612.
  7. ^Verduyn 1995, p. 129.
  8. ^Verduyn 2004, p. 148.
  9. ^Colombo, John Robert (1984). Canadian literary landmarks. Willowdale, Ont: Hounslow Press. p. 103. ISBN9780888820730.
  10. ^Martin, John H. 'Orson Squire Fowler: Phrenology and Octagon Houses 1809-1887'. Crooked Lake Review. Retrieved 3 March 2017.
  11. ^Verduyn 1995, pp. 126–127.
  12. ^ abVerduyn 1995, pp. 129–136.
  13. ^Verduyn 1995, p. 117.
  14. ^Verduyn 1995, p. 126.
  15. ^Verduyn 2004, p. 153.
  16. ^ abSemley, John (8 August 2014). 'Why there's new interest in the book 'Bear': Irony, sly humour (and the bear sex)'. Globe & Mail. Retrieved 6 February 2015.
  17. ^'100 novels that make you proud to be a Canadian'(PDF). CBC Books. Canadian Broadcasting Corporation. 2014. Retrieved 6 February 2015.
  18. ^Keeler, Emily M. (8 December 2014). 'Marian Engel's Bear, reviewed: The best Canadian novel of all time'. The National Post. Postmedia Network Inc. Retrieved 5 February 2015.
  19. ^'Bearotica: Why the 1976 novel 'Bear' is actually a good read'. Q. CBC Radio. 18 August 2014. Retrieved 6 February 2014.
  20. ^ abFlinn, Sue Carter (23 December 2014). 'The Bear necessities: Marian Engel's novel gets a makeover'. Quill & Quire. St, Joseph Media. Retrieved 6 February 2015.

References[edit]

  • Brady, Elizabeth (1987). Marian Engel and her works. Toronto, Ontario: ECW Press. ISBN9780920763278.
  • Verduyn, Christl (1995). Lifelines: Marian Engel's writings. Montreal: McGill-Queen's University Press. ISBN9780773513389.
  • Verduyn, Christl; Garay, Kathleen L. (2004). Marian Engel: life in letters. Toronto, Ontario: University of Toronto Press. ISBN9780802036872.

Further reading[edit]

  • Hair, Donald S. (Spring 1982). 'Marian Engel's 'Bear''. Canadian Literature (#92 'Fiction in the Seventies').

External links[edit]

  • Engel on writing the book, reading passages, CBC Books, Canadian Broadcasting Corporation
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