The Snow Bear
Material type:
- 9781847152558
- YL/F/WEB
Item type | Current library | Collection | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | Item holds | |
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Kandy | Fiction | YL/F/WEB |
Available
Order online |
YB130019 |
Total holds: 0
Enhanced descriptions from Syndetics:
As the snow begins to fall just days before Christmas, Grandad helps Sara build an igloo in the garden with a small snow bear to watch over it. And when Sara wakes in the middle of the night, it looks very different outside. She sets out on an enchanted journey through a world of ice, but will she ever find her way home...
Reviews provided by Syndetics
Kirkus Book Review
After hearing her grandfather's stories of finding a polar bear cub while living with an Inuit family in the Canadian Arctic, a little girl dreams her own wintry adventure.Sara's parents have skipped the family's annual Christmastime visit to Grandpa this year, staying at home as they await the birth of her baby brother and sending her alone. Sara loves visiting Grandpa but misses her parents, especially now that a major snowfall threatens to keep them isolated up north over the holiday. Grandpa, writing a book on Inuit folktales, entertains her with accounts of his own childhood, when he accompanied his fatherthen studying the Inuit peopleto the Canadian Arctic, where Grandpa and Alignak, an Inuit boy, rescued a polar bear cub. Sara builds a snow bear and coaxes Grandpa into building a small igloo, where she snuggles into a sleeping bag and, listening to more stories, dreams. Originally published in 2012, the storyespecially in its generic portrait of Inuit culturefeels stale, the characters bland. As recollected in Grandpa's childhood memories and Sara's dream, the Inuit are familiar, pre-industrial tropesexotic sources of folktales and artifacts. (An endnote oddly describes Nunavut, Canada's vast Inuit territory, as a "settlement.") Vacillating between realism and fantasy, the plot never kicks into gear. Sara and Grandpa present white. Homey illustrations add warmth to an otherwise chilly read.Trite and plodding. (author's notes) (Fiction. 6-10) Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.There are no comments on this title.
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