I missed this novel by the great Marian Engel when it was first published, and I can see why it was both controversial and highly praised. It seems to epitomize the 1970s: daring, feminist, Canadian in an admirably sophisticated way. The protagonist is a woman who has taken on a scholarly project to spend the summer going through papers left in a remote mansion in the Ontario bush. A pet bear goes along with the project. The lonely, rather depressed woman first befriends the bear and then is sexually attracted to him. The bear is fascinating, a bit like a gruff, uncommunicative man but better. He lets her be, makes no demands on her, and the experience liberates her. We feel as though she has broken through a barrier to become wholly herself, and independent. A beautifully written afterword by Aritha Herk adds to the reader's understanding.