I love this book. :)
First read it as a pre-teen around 2012 and re-read it several times between now and then. I've always found it to be a great comfort read, if a bit of a guilty pleasure. So a couple of days ago, I picked it up again to decide if it would be worth recommending to my fourteen-year-old sister.
Well, I'd only intended to skim through the thing but somehow ended up binging it in one sitting, was thrilled to discover it was part of a series (still can't believe it's been sitting on my shelf some ten years and I never knew there were sequels haha), and quickly devoured the second book over the course of a day. I write this somewhat-belated review with the third book in hand. Honestly, I'm impatient to get back to it, so I'll try not to ramble too much.
Reading The Shadow of the Bear is, I repeat, a guilty pleasure. I'm still not sure if this book really merits four stars. Even as someone who binged it with a silly grin glued to my face, snickering to myself at the characters' antics and staying up until ungodly hours of morning to follow a story I've already read more times than I can count, I'm all too aware of its flaws.
Some of the dialogue and character interactions come off as a little cheesey, unrealistic, or cringeworthy. The villain and his philosophical monologues had me rolling my eyes here and there. As others have pointed out, real teenagers do not always talk or act like their fictional counterparts in this book. The sniggering, unnecessarily cruel highschool bullies are a tired cliche it could've done without and- sorry, Mrs. Doman- you can't convince me that 'Immaculate Complexion' is an insult. Certain events seemed contrived and the integration of certain themes, messages, and morals clumsy. Some other readers have complained it comes off as "preachy". I'm Catholic and generally agree with Doman's messages, but I admit the way they're conveyed is too blatant- maybe trite- even for me. I found a few parts of the book lacking in subtlety and depth.
Ah, now it sounds like I don't like this book, but I really do. Despite its occasional cheesiness and improbability, what I absolutely love about this book and the series as a whole is how fun, charming, innocent, sincere, and idealistically hopeful it is, without shying away from mature themes (more so in the later books, but found here as well). In some ways, this first installment reads like a fairytale, which, for me, somewhat excuses the overt platitudes and the occasional lack of realism. Taking it as a retelling that uses allegory and symbolism to remain faithful to the original tale, I'm able to suspend my disbelief and enjoy it for what it is.
The mystery, action, and romance make this book a lot of fun, but the best parts of it are the main characters and their relationships. The close connection of the two sisters and their banter are very endearing to me. Perhaps because I have always seen myself in Blanche- the anxious, staid, melancholy, overprotective older sister- and my younger sisters in Rose- the dreamy, affable, adventurous, fierce, bubbly airhead, I love their bond and relate to their loneliness and their struggles to find likeminded friends, as well as their shared feelings of being out of place- like a rare and misunderstood creature in a world that doesn't appreciate our unconventionality and believes faith and naivete are synonymous. The sisters' dynamic really makes the book, and their budding friendship with Bear and the unexpected connection they find with him is similarly fun and heartwarming.
A final saving grace for Shadow of the Bear is Doman's voice- her poetic writing style and the genuine way she approaches her story and characters. This book isn't perfect, but I have always felt that it was written with heart. For this, I hold the characters- Blanche, Rose, Bear, Fish- dear, thoroughly enjoy each re-read, and look forward to reading Waking Rose.