On Being a Bear: Face to Face with Our Wild Sibling
Rémy Marion, foreword by Lambert Wilson


Hardback (B402) | Jun 2021 | Greystone Books | 9781771646987 | 248pp | 190x133mm | GEN | AUD$39.99, NZD$44.99

For fans of Jane Goodall and Lawrence Anthony, this up-close, captivating look at bears traces our complex relationship to these species throughout history

On Being a Bear draws on history, legends, scientific studies, and the author's thirty years of observing bears around the world to offer a richly detailed biography of these iconic animals, including the many ways bears have figured in our lives and imaginations.

As author Rémy Marion tells us, some cultures view bears as our wild cousins — as humans cloaked in fur — while others cast bears as cuddly characters in cartoons or seek to eradicate their grizzled forms from civilisation. Scientists have made new discoveries into bears' varied diets, their powerful sense of smell, and a mother bear's stubborn patience with her cubs. Bears play a vital role in our ecosystems, and new studies into bear hibernation could lead to medical breakthroughs for humans. Offering these and more astonishing insights, On Being a Bear brings readers face-to-face with these long admired, feared, and misunderstood animals, and sets the record straight through a combination of thrilling science and expert storytelling.

'The result of an obsession that spans at least three decades, On Being a Bear comes very close to tell us what bears 'really' are. A precise and passionate account.' — Bernd Brunner, author of BearsBirdmania, and Winterlust