Books

Maybe a Bear Ate It!: the review

If Denver four-year-olds make small talk about literature, surely Maybe a Bear Ate It! would come up. The picture book has been selected as the book in the state's One Book 4 Colorado preschool reading campaign. In theory, every kid in the sandbox will be reading it. The story by Robie E...
Carbonatix Pre-Player Loader

Audio By Carbonatix

If Denver four-year-olds make small talk about literature, surely Maybe a Bear Ate It! would come up. The picture book has been selected as the book in the state’s One Book 4 Colorado preschool reading campaign. In theory, every kid in the sandbox will be reading it. 

The story by Robie E. Harris is simple. An unnamed boy or creature — the drawings by Michael Emberley don’t make the protagonist’s origins entirely clear — has lost something. He suspects a bear is responsible. That he lost a book, and is distraught without it, probably contributed to Maybe A Bear Ate It! being selected for the program. 

But what should be the dominant question of the book — where is this misplaced object? — is replaced by a hunt for who is at fault for its misplacement. 

At the risk of spoiling the end, a bear did not in fact eat the mislaid book, and the other suspects are equally faultless. Still, there’s something both childlike and adult in the hope that a small loss could stem from a larger force. It’s also easy to draw parallels between the accused bear in the title and the rash of bear-related fatalities last summer. In both cases, bears take the fall for the consequences of a messy bedroom and feeding wild animals. 

Will you step up to support Westword this year?

We’re aiming to raise $50,000 by December 31, so we can continue covering what matters most to this community. If Westword matters to you, please take action and contribute today, so when news happens, our reporters can be there.

$50,000

Despite the relatable dread that some power, be it a bear or vengeful God, is controlling our fate and taking our books, Maybe A Bear Ate It! lacks what literary critic James Wood described as “thisness: “[a] detail that draws abstraction toward itself and seems to kill that abstraction with a puff of palpability.” What book is the boy missing? Is the protagonist even a boy? What kind of bear would be hungry for a book? These are the questions Colorado pre-schoolers needs answers to, and ones Robie H. Harris fails to provide.


Follow us on Twitter!

Like us on Facebook!

GET MORE COVERAGE LIKE THIS

Sign up for the Arts & Culture newsletter to get the latest stories delivered to your inbox

Loading latest posts...