The Princess and the Bear

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Overview

He was once a king, turned into a bear as punishment for his cruel and selfish deeds.

She was a once a princess, now living in the form of a hound.

Wary companions, they are sent—in human form—back to a time when magic went terribly astray. Together they must right the wrongs caused by this devastating power—if only they can find a way to trust each other.

But even as each becomes aware of an ever-growing attraction, the stakes are rising and they must find a way to eliminate this evil force—or risk losing each other forever.

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Overview

He was once a king, turned into a bear as punishment for his cruel and selfish deeds.

She was a once a princess, now living in the form of a hound.

Wary companions, they are sent—in human form—back to a time when magic went terribly astray. Together they must right the wrongs caused by this devastating power—if only they can find a way to trust each other.

But even as each becomes aware of an ever-growing attraction, the stakes are rising and they must find a way to eliminate this evil force—or risk losing each other forever.

Editorial Reviews

Children's Literature
This fantasy fable, the author of which has a PhD in Germanic literature, takes place in a dense forest and has the feel of a grown-up fairy tale. The premise of this sequel to The Princess and the Hound stipulates that some humans have magic, which allows them to shape-shift to the animal that represents their essence. These humans can communicate and empathize with the animal kingdom. The bear of the title used to be a young king, named Richon. The princess, Chala, is a hound. Friends when they were human 200 years ago, they have jousted as animals. But, at the request of the wild man, they work together to find the cat man, who is spreading deathly unmagic. Along the way, Richon, who had been a spoiled young king, discovers that the lord chamberlain and the royal steward killed his parents so they can take over the kingdom. Following an epic battle that reinstates a wiser Richon on the throne, Chala, determinedly and stereotypically feminist must decide whether to remain a hound or convert permanently to human form. She chooses the latter and, to defeat cat man, even relinquishes her magic. The two marry and live happily ever after. In the end, Richon gallantly shares his surplus magic with Chala; they assume, from the wild man, the responsibility of spreading magic; and, they have the baby Chala has always wanted. The convoluted tale is told in alternating chapters, first between the anonymous hound and bear, then between Chala and Richon. Neither character, however, develops sufficiently to become either a fully sympathetic animal or fully human. As a result, the reader does not care about them or about their relationship, and the story remains stilted. Reviewer: CynthiaLevinson
VOYA
For two hundred years, Richon has lived as a bear. He is tormented both by memories of the human life he lost and the cruelties he executed during his days of selfish power. Only a hound keeps Richon company. Once she also took human form, but now she exults in her return to the wild freedom of the woods. Their wordless companionship is sometimes difficult, but over time it provides great comfort to both of them. When an unspeakable danger, the life-sapping force of unmagic, begins to destroy their home, the two set out on an adventure that forces each to make great sacrifices and to draw on the strengths that both animal and human knowledge can provide. In this stand-alone companion novel to The Princess and the Hound (Eos/HarperCollins, 2007/VOYA August 2007), Harrison weaves an unusual tapestry from the strands of a folktale in which humans and animals shift forms, a fairytale in which kings and princesses outwit evil, and a moral tale in which the redemptive power of love heals great wounds, enables harrowing sacrifices, and provides unexpected reservoirs of strength. The novel begins slowly as the omniscient narrator alternates chapters between the hound's and the bear's perspective. In addition, readers expecting a conventional princess tale may be put off as this heroine loves long chases and the taste of warm blood, but Harrison's vision of female strength and courage is refreshing on its own terms, and the bear's growth toward true humanity is equally empowering. Reviewer: Megan Lynn Isaac
School Library Journal
Gr 7 Up—This stand-alone sequel to The Princess and the Hound (HarperCollins, 2007) examines and critiques humanity by contrasting animals and people. Here, in what the author calls a parallel novel, the legend of King Richon is told. Because of his cruelty to those with magic, he was transformed into a bear 200 years earlier. The hound Chala, from the previous volume, gradually becomes his constant companion. Meanwhile, "unmagic" is spreading, and they must travel back in time in order to save the kingdom. King Richon, who returns to his human form, aims to make amends for his tyrannical rule. Chala, choosing to give up her hound state, must reconcile herself to her human limitations as she wonders if she sacrificed too much. Their mutual respect and deep friendship subtly and convincingly grow into love while they explore their magical shape-shifting powers and restore peace to the kingdom. Told in third person, the chapters alternate between the points of view of the bear and the hound. The plot pacing is even and taught. Deep exploration of the main characters' flaws and values blends smoothly with an exploration of good versus evil. Some well-drawn descriptions of bloody battles between animals and humans may be too intense for some readers, but the love story is as compelling as the characters are strong and complex. The message of ecological responsibility is slightly heavy-handed but readers will find the relationship between independent Chala and pensive Richon appealing.—Amy J. Chow, The Brearley School, New York City
Kirkus Reviews
Although this follows directly from The Princess and the Hound (2007), both stories are complete in themselves and can be read independently. This beautifully understated tale is of magic and "unmagic," human and animal, forest and town. A bear and a hound circle each other, warily. He was once a king; she was once a princess. The bear does not know his magic yet; the hound is uneasy with hers. When they see unmagic (think antimatter) sucking the life out of their world, they both return to the past, to King Richon's devastated kingdom, to save it. Richon the bear and Chala the hound move between animal and human existence; the relationships between animal and human, and the magic in being both, are exquisitely delineated, and the love story between the two strong protagonists is all the more powerful for being intensely restrained. There's a fair amount of bloodshed and violence, but that, too, is understated. Not for every reader, but an absorbing tale for the right one. (Fantasy. 12 & up)

Product Details

  • ISBN-13: 9780594255093
  • Publisher: HarperCollins Publishers
  • Publication date: 2/10/2011
  • Pages: 327
  • Sales rank: 39,376
  • Age range: 12 - 17 Years
  • Product dimensions: 5.20 (w) x 7.90 (h) x 1.00 (d)

Meet the Author

Mette Harrison

Mette Ivie Harrison has a PhD in Germanic literature and is the author of The Princess and the Hound; Mira, Mirror; and The Monster in Me.

Of The Princess and the Bear, she says, "I never thought there would be a sequel to The Princess and the Hound, but when I read through the galleys, I realized that there was another book waiting in the story of the bear and the hound. In some ways, you might think of it more as a parallel novel than as a sequel, because it stands on its own as a new story. But who knows? Maybe I’ll look at these galleys and find another story demanding to be told."

She lives with her family in Utah.

Read an Excerpt

Princess and the Bear, The SNY

Chapter One

The Hound

The smell of the forest hit her first. Pine and moss and sweat-touched fur.

It was right again.

And so was she.

Her paws were on the ground. She could stretch her back and scratch herself as needed and she had a tail again to keep her balance.

She felt how strong and wide her jaw was now, and she tested her teeth by chomping at a branch of the tree at her side. It snapped instantly, cleanly, just as prey would when she was ready to chase it.

She could hear the distant call of a bird and the splash of a fish in the water not far away.

She tried out her strong legs and discovered she could run as fast as ever, leap over fallen trees, then turn around in a flick of movement and be racing back the same way again.

That was when she nearly careened into the bear.

And remembered why he was here.

The bear who had been a man, whose story she had heard when she was a princess.

The bear Prince George had brought her to, the one who had challenged her, then watched her change from woman to hound.

Where was Prince George? And the princess?

The hound had not seen them leave. She had been too busy rediscovering herself.

Now the bear sniffed in her direction.

She sniffed back and approached him slowly, head down, to show that she would not attack. Her lips twitched and she caught a snarl in her throat. The bear made a wordless sound like a groan, then gestured with one large paw toward the rocky part of the forest.

He took a step in that direction, then stopped.Waiting, but without threat.

She thought briefly of the year she had spent as human, when she had never been allowed to choose anything for herself. The boots she had had to wear, pinching her feet, the gowns that were "suitable," the words she was expected to say, the curtsying and smiling.

But that was gone.

She was a hound again. And the bear was an animal, as she was.

She lumbered cautiously alongside him as they crossed twice over a cold stream and approached a cave.

The bear entered it.

She moved across the rocks and peered inside.

The bear settled at one end of the cave and stretched out on the floor near the back with his side to the rock wall. She could smell water in the air. It was dripping on the bear, but he did not complain.

She moved forward, then tucked herself in close to him, letting her legs curl up underneath her. She could feel the brush of his fur against hers.

She shivered, then moved closer to the bear, until she could feel the hurried breathing of his chest against her.

Gradually it slowed. And she slept.

The next morning, as the two drank by the stream, a herd of rabbits crossed their path.

The hound held back, allowing the bear the first kill. But his attack was so loud and wide that by the time he had the first rabbit in his mouth, all the others had scattered.

The hound spent long minutes chasing them, but they were gone, and so was any other hope of game that morning. The woods were silent, the animals warned by the great noise of the bear and the lingering scent of death.

Angry, she returned to the stream, expecting the bear to have eaten his kill.

Yet the bear held out the rabbit, freshly cleaned in the stream and an hour dead.

She took half of the rabbit meat, and left the other half for him. He must have been offering half as recompense for ruining her chance to get her own.

But the bear would not eat his half of the rabbit. He pushed it toward her.

She pushed it back to him and whined.

He turned away from it.

She growled at him. How could he be so stubborn? She knew he must be as hungry as she.

But he would not take it.

So she turned her back on the meat.

They went back to the cave, her stomach only half full and his entirely empty.

What was wrong?

She could speak the language of the hounds, but he could not. His mouth could only produce the language of the bears, which neither understood.

Princess and the Bear, The SNY. Copyright © by Mette Harrison. Reprinted by permission of HarperCollins Publishers, Inc. All rights reserved. Available now wherever books are sold.

Customer Reviews

Average Rating 4
( 23 )

Rating Distribution

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See All Sort by: Showing 1 – 20 of 23 Customer Reviews
  • Posted July 22, 2011

    Kinda boring

    The idea for the book is awesome, but the author just drones on and on and on. I couldn't even finish the book.

    1 out of 1 people found this review helpful.

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  • Anonymous

    Posted May 6, 2012

    Hmm

    It was pretty good but not amazing.

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  • Anonymous

    Posted September 29, 2011

    OKAY

    The Princess and the Bear is an OKAY book. It didn't give me butterflies in my stomach during the romantic scene. The book has a good-ish plot, not bad, but I dont like the fact that a great deal of the book, the characters are in animal form, as well as the fact that it is extremly slow paced in the begining. I wished that it would have moved faster. But all in all, the book was not terrible, and there was a happy ending (yay!)

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  • Anonymous

    Posted August 1, 2009

    I Also Recommend:

    This book is an amazing story!!!!!!!!!

    The book has magic and people who can turn into animals. The girl who is a wolf meets a man who is a bear. The man learns to be thankful of curse that was put on to him. When he meets the wolf he thinks nithing of her. But when his kingdom is in danger and the two must fight the danger off. He starts noticing how horrible he was to his subjects.The wolf learns that her life was not how she wanted it to be. She starts noticing how humans treat animals and helps to save the animals.Together the two will beat the bad magic. The man falls in love with the woman who helped him. So the two get married. The book is a basic fantasy with a little romance.

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  • Posted July 20, 2009

    more from this reviewer

    I Also Recommend:

    refreshing

    As much as I love all of today's fantasy fiction sagas and trilogys, this book is refreshing because it's not like any of them. You feel like you're reading a book that was published centuries ago not years. It was beautiful.

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  • Posted May 1, 2009

    more from this reviewer

    Reviewed by Joan Stradling for TeensReadToo.com

    In an age of kings and princesses, Harrison weaves a fantasy tale of magic that links humans and animals in a surprising and unique way.

    King Richon and Princess Chala continue the adventure begun in THE PRINCESS AND THE HOUND. Though I did not read the first book, I had no problems understanding and enjoying THE PRINCESS AND THE BEAR.

    Richon and Chala are given a chance to pit themselves against the cat man and destroy his unmagic to save their way of life and their entire world. But will they be able to hold back the evil the cat man is spreading?

    Grab a copy of THE PRINCESS AND THE BEAR and lose yourself in a world of animal magic sure to thrill you with every turn of the page.

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    Posted October 11, 2010

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    Posted January 13, 2010

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