Home    >    Black Woods, Blue Sky

Black Woods, Blue Sky

In piecemeal fashion the novel sketches the backstory of a boy who was raised by a mother bear before being taken in by foster parents and has never fully adapted to human ways. Ms. Ivey leaves Arthur’s animal upbringing frustratingly vague, but she finds rich material in Birdie and Emaleen’s dawning understanding of his feral side, and in their tragic attempts to tame it.
Read Full Review >>
Ivey is an enthralling storyteller who paints the Alaskan landscape and its inhabitants with equal affection ... One could quibble with Ivey’s sometimes shaky integration of realistic and supernatural elements, and one vital transition is abrupt. Still, the author weaves the tapestry of her story so deftly, presenting the natural world with respect instead of romanticization, that later developments hit us with devastating force.
Read Full Review >>
Poignant ... Quietly suspenseful, laced with beauty and shot through with darkness, Black Woods, Blue Sky explores the nature of courage, the limits of love, and what happens when nature and civilization collide.
Read Full Review >>

Related Books