Current:Home > ScamsBook excerpt: "Bear" by Julia Phillips -Momentum Wealth Path
Book excerpt: "Bear" by Julia Phillips
View
Date:2025-04-16 07:59:09
We may receive an affiliate commission from anything you buy from this article.
Julia Phillips, whose bestselling debut novel, "Disappearing Earth," was a National Book Award finalist, returns with "Bear" (Hogarth), a hypnotic, tense story about sisters on an island off the coast of Washington whose lives are upended by the presence of a bear near their home.
Read an excerpt below.
"Bear" by Julia Phillips
$21 at AmazonPrefer to listen? Audible has a 30-day free trial available right now.
Try Audible for free"You won't Believe what we saw from the boat tonight," she told Elena, who was at the sink washing the day's dishes. It was late, and Elena's shift had ended hours earlier, but she always waited up for Sam. Elena had brought home from the golf club leftover chili con carne, and Sam was picking at it, shredded cheddar and green onion. Their mother was in her room sleeping. "Will you guess?"
The woods around their house were silent and black. Thick with hawthorn, which grew dark fruit, and Douglas fir. A yellow gleam at the edge of the kitchen window marked the presence of their closest neighbors, the Larsens, who had spotlights tastefully illuminating their landscaping, and who gave too- polite greetings to the girls whenever they bumped into each other in town. Danny Larsen, their youngest son, had asked Elena to homecoming senior year. His mother shut that down immediately.
Elena said, "A dead body."
"Oh, Jesus," Sam said. Put down her fork. "Would I talk like this if we saw a body?"
"I don't know. You get worked up over the weirdest stuff." Elena pushed her hair from her cheek with one wet wrist. "A whale."
"We see whales all the time. Guess again."
"A sea lion."
Sam rolled her eyes. And though she was behind her sister's back, Elena couldn't see her, Elena still seemed to know. The movement must have been felt. So Elena was already on to the next guess: "A merman."
"You're never going to get it. A bear!"
"No way."
"A huge bear! Swimming in the channel!"
Sam had seen it herself: the wet, furred hump of the animal's back, the line of its neck, its pointed nose and small round ears. The water was silver and the sky was dimming blue, and the creature, against those colors, was a dark spot, but the last light in the air outlined its form, made it clear and shocking and strange. The tourists called out to each other in delight. Exclamations in English, Spanish, Chinese. One of them tossed something in the water toward it, and another passenger scolded them. The ferry chugged on, but for a few minutes, long odd ones, the boat and the bear were side by side, pushing forward, abandoning the mainland together, heading out toward the night. The captain even made an announcement over the intercom so anyone sitting inside could come see for themselves. The bear's lifted head. Its slicked shoulders. The widening ripples it left behind. It did not look in their direction as it paddled determinedly on.
Elena was drying the plates now, stacking them in the cupboards. "Where in the channel? You don't think it could reach us, do you?"
"Between Shaw and Lopez." Sam was tickled by the question. "Why? Are you scared?"
"Of bears?"
"Of scary bears?"
"You're not?"
"No way." What was Sam afraid of? Withering away here. Dreaming of chances she'd never be able to take, and shriveling up from that denial, getting poorer and put under more pressure and pushed even farther from the rest of the world. Compared to those fears, getting mauled by a bear seemed a delight.
Elena turned back to the sink. "Our brave girl."
"How was your day?"
"Fine. No wildlife. Unless you count Bert Greenwood coming in drunk at noon."
"That's not unusual, I guess."
"More of a whale than a bear," Elena said.
Her hands were under the faucet. Her face was tipped down, making her neck stretch long and the bones bump up at her nape. "Want me to do the pots?" Sam asked.
Elena shook her head. "It's no problem. Keep talking."
From the book "Bear" by Julia Phillips. Copyright © 2024 by Julia Phillips. Publishing by Hogarth, an imprint of Random House, a division of Penguin Random House LLC. All rights reserved.
Get the book here:
"Bear" by Julia Phillips
$21 at Amazon $28 at Barnes & NobleBuy locally from Bookshop.org
For more info:
- "Bear" by Julia Phillips (Hogarth), in Hardcover, eBook and Audio formats
- juliaphillipswrites.com
veryGood! (17797)
Related
- New data highlights 'achievement gap' for students in the US
- Former Exxon Scientists Tell Congress of Oil Giant’s Climate Research Before Exxon Turned to Denial
- Trump’s Forest Service Planned More Logging in the Yaak Valley, Environmentalists Want Biden To Make it a ‘Climate Refuge’
- Vanderpump Rules' Raquel Leviss Turns on Tom Sandoval and Reveals Secret He Never Wanted Out
- Federal hiring is about to get the Trump treatment
- Senate 2020: In Alaska, a Controversy Over an Embattled Mine Has Tightened the Race
- What the BLM Shake-Up Could Mean for Public Lands and Their Climate Impact
- Biden lays out new path for student loan relief after Supreme Court decision
- Selena Gomez's "Weird Uncles" Steve Martin and Martin Short React to Her Engagement
- Helping endangered sea turtles, by air
Ranking
- Can Bill Belichick turn North Carolina into a winner? At 72, he's chasing one last high
- China’s Dramatic Solar Shift Could Take Sting Out of Trump’s Panel Tariffs
- Chris Hemsworth Reacts to Scorsese and Tarantino's Super Depressing Criticism of Marvel Movies
- 4 dead after small plane crashes near South Carolina golf course
- All That You Wanted to Know About She’s All That
- Woman hit and killed by stolen forklift
- Anxiety Mounts Abroad About Climate Leadership and the Volatile U.S. Election
- Hunter Biden attorney accuses House GOP lawmakers of trying to derail plea agreement
Recommendation
Buckingham Palace staff under investigation for 'bar brawl'
Wife of Pittsburgh dentist dies from fatal gunshot on safari — was it an accident or murder?
Transcript: Former Vice President Mike Pence on Face the Nation, July 2, 2023
The Warming Climates of the Arctic and the Tropics Squeeze the Mid-latitudes, Where Most People Live
Woman dies after Singapore family of 3 gets into accident in Taiwan
New Climate Warnings in Old Permafrost: ‘It’s a Little Scary Because it’s Happening Under Our Feet.’
Has the Ascend Nylon Plant in Florida Cut Its Greenhouse Gas Emissions, as Promised? A Customer Wants to Know
Man, woman injured by bears in separate incidents after their dogs chased the bears