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Exit, Pursued by a Bear by E.K. Johnston
4.0

this review was originally posted on my blog!

Whew. This book was a ride.

Things to know before picking up EPBAB:

- It's a retelling of Shakespeare's The Winter's Tale.
- Our main character, Hermione Winters (do you see the retelling, now?) is a cheerleader in a small town in Canada (it took me embarrassingly long to figure this out) who gets raped while at cheer camp the summer before her senior year.
- It's a very short book (<300 pages), and it's definitely possible to read this in one sitting/one day.


Since they are few, let's first talk about the things I didn't like:
- The writing wasn't anything spectacular, and at times it did have the feel of an older person writing about teenagers.
- It doesn't touch on a lot of the topics that surround rape. Rather, it picks a few of those topics and goes into greater detail about the few rather than the many.
- Hermione is a little bit too strong. I know, it sounds ridiculous, but though we do see her break and fall apart, I wanted to see more of that. (Jeez, that sounds cruel.)


Things I liked:
- Hermione is such a strong character.
- I found the story and character reactions a bit unrealistic at times (based on what I've read and researched
Spoilerand based on Johnston's author's note at the end, which states
"It was very important to me that Hermione have an excellent support system in this book. Her parents, friends, teachers, coach, minister, and community rally around her. She receives the medical care she requires. The police are gracious and helpful. This is not standard behavior. Many rape victims are isolated, unable to ask for the help they need, much less receive it. [...] I gave Hermione a Polly, but I think Polly might be the least fictional person in this book."
Therefore, I think the support and lack of questions and stares and whispers that Hermione experiences in this book doesn't line up with the treatment of, especially small town, rape victims. In a perfect universe, there wouldn't be a Leo or a reporter that says Hermione deserved what she got. I found those reactions to Hermione's rape extremely--and sadly so--realistic. My "problem" here lies with the fact that those are the only two people in the book that seem to not believe her.
), but Johnston recognizes this and so this book is almost like "Here is how I wish rape victims were treated" with a little bit of "Here is how they are actually treated" and I really appreciated this approach.
- It's about the journey not the destination. If this is the type of thing that makes you not enjoy a book, please pick up a different book. This book really deals with Hermione's development and her progression after the rape rather than the mentality of "we need to find the rapist" and that being the only thing that matters.
- In addition to it being a very quick read, I found the story was nicely paced.
- It works really well as a modern-day retelling and re-imagining of Shakespeare's play.
- Emily's team is like her family, and I love the female friendships (YAY) in this as well as the male friendships!
- Polly, as Johnston noted, is by far the most real character in this book, and is one of the most real characters I've read in a long time.
- This book made me legit cry because there is an accurately represented minister of a church. The fact that she could have made him a stereotypical, judge-y, small-town preacher that condemns Hermione and didn't means a lot to me personally.
- I have to congratulate Johnston on her creativity with the names because almost all of the original ones are absolutely ridiculous. Good job. (If you're curious, most of them are abbreviated nicknames, e.g. Polly, Tig, Dion, Leo.)