By: Tammy Armstrong
Libby ebook / Hardcover from Scott County Library 343 with author's note and acknowledgements
Published: 2024
Genre: historical fiction
The HarperCollins blurb about this book says (if you don't like spoilers, skip this):
An immersive and enchantingly atmospheric novel set
during the Great Depression, about a girl and a bear raised as sister
and brother in a remote logging camp and the lengths to which they’ll go
to protect each other.
New Brunswick, 1934. When a cook
in a logging camp finds an orphaned baby bear, he brings it home to his
wife, who names the cub Bruno and raises him alongside her newborn
daughter, Pearly. Growing up, Pearly and Bruno share a special bond and
become inseparable. While life in the camp can be perilous—loggers are
regularly injured or even killed—the Everlasting family form a
close-knit community with the woodsmen, who accept and embrace the tame
young bear.
But all that changes when a new supervisor arrives, a
ruthless profiteer who pushes the workers to their breaking point and
abuses Bruno. When the man is found dead in a ditch, the blame falls on
the bear; soon after, Bruno is kidnapped and sold to an animal trader.
Determined to rescue the only brother she has ever known, Pearly, now a
teenager, sets off alone on a hazardous journey through the forest—her
first trip to “the Outside”—to find him. In the harrowing quest to bring
him home through miles of ice and snow, eluding malevolent spirits and
the cruelty of strange villagers, she will discover new worlds and a
strength she never knew she possessed.
Steeped in rural folklore and superstition, and set against the backdrop of an enchanting woodland, Pearly Everlasting is a story about the triumph of good over evil, the beauty of the natural world, and the bonds that cannot be broken.
I don't remember who recommended this book to me, but I had a lot of trouble getting "into" it.
In the chapter "Like Deep Water or Ghosts," there was a scene that really caught my attention. Swicker (the evil supervisor) offers the men in camp bottles of Coca-Cola:
"Me and Ivy had shared a bottle of Coca-Cola just about twice in our lives. Swicker's smile reminded me of a leghold trap. Slow and careful, I took them. He glanced at Papa in a smug way. I saw then something elemental in my father for the first time. A rigidness to keep course, a firmness in his own convictions - as easy for him as trickery or vanity or two-facedness was for another man. And I wondered if I too might possess this trait, and it saddened me to think that I might not, that, should the opportunity arise, I might choose the easy mistake again."
"When It Thundered but Did Not Rain" is the chapter I was on when I realized I wouldn't finish the ebook in time. I'm glad that I requested and received a print copy from Scott County Library promptly! Interestingly, I enjoyed the book much more (Page 78 of 339 was where I picked up the story). Reading the rest of it was a delight!
Page 104: "Under all of this, tucked up in newspaper, was Song-catcher's gifts to me and Bruno: our little spoon with the silver bear and the bowl engraved with our names and birth date: Pearly Everlasting and Bruno False Spring 1918. For just a minute, I felt Mama beside me again."
For some reason, the tenderness of this moment really struck me. Pearly was an interesting character and her emotions in this scene are relatable.
Page 115: "It was a house of half-rolled shades and breakfast plates still on the table at suppertime. It was a house that looked preoccupied with thoughts other than being a house. Books strewn everywhere. One wall in the living room dedicated to scraps of paper and magazine tear-outs. Everything stuck through with sewing pins."
Song-catcher and Ebony were super interesting characters. I love this description of their home.
Page 142: "They told him of the daily shape-ups in New York where men stood before a hiring boss and were cut from the crowd like horses, just to earn a day's wages. All of them castaways. Homesick and lost. The world felt like a loose skin, shedding something Ansell could neither recognize nor name."
I love how she uses language here! And Ansell was another lovely character, with his silver-streaked skin that had been struck by lightning.
Page 176: "Everything was still in it, except for three cans of milk and Mama's double-horn necklace from the little inside pocket I'd placed it in to keep it safe. That's when I knew, with sinking certainty, the Go-Preacher had not gone as far away as he'd let on. Nothing but a sneak thief."
I hate it when people do evil! But it's ten times worse when it's someone who says they're doing the Lord's work. That is so reprehensible!
Page 221: "'What'd they do with the molasses?'
'What?'
'After they got the windows out. They use it for cookies? Beans?'
'I don't think anyone's asked that before.'"
When Amaël is telling Pearly about stained glass windows being shipped from France to Bracken in vats of molasses to protect them from being broken, she asks a very logical question. Especially during the Great Depression when hunger was a huge force in daily life.
Page 246: "'When you leave here, go left, out past where Devlin's dairy used to be, then past where Shuggie used to have his smokehouse. It's out near Frog Pond Road, I think. Over where the old train station café was? The one that used to sell that real good potato hash? You can't miss it.'
As she explained all this, . . . I walked in the direction the cashier had given me. Uncertain how I'd find things no longer there, I walked, out to where the houses thinned."
I laughed when I read this because I've actually heard people give directions like this! It's as though they think you can see the past and its images in your mind! Poor Pearly.
Page 333: "'He's been outside your door for days now, hovering around. Bad as the Persian. Worried sick about you, he was.'"
Mrs. Prue is talking about her husband. Mr. Prue got Pearly's necklace back for her. She had been attacked by the awful twins. Ansell and Bruno had rescued her then left for the logging camp. I cried. Mr. and Mrs. Prue, along with Amaël the vet all helped redeem the story from all the bad guys and sad events. I love this book.