The Polar Bear Scientists. By
Peter Lourie. Houghton Mifflin Harcourt. $9.99.
Hold Fast. By Blue Balliett.
Scholastic. $6.99.
Here are two paperback
reissues that give readers a chance to consider anew some interesting factual
and fictional works – or encounter the material for the first time. The Polar Bear Scientists, originally published
in 2012 in the “Scientists in the Field” series, is built around interviews
with biologist Steven Amstrup, “the godfather of Alaskan polar bear research
for the past thirty years.” Amstrup talks not only about climate change, for
which the polar bear has become a sort of poster child, but also about the
history of studies of the largest bears in the world, the
capture-release-and-recapture program that makes modern scientific study of
them possible, the use of radio collars to track bears that move between polar
nations, and more. Other scientists and support personnel, such as George
Durner and Kristin Simac, discuss the bears as well, and all are seen with
bears, with the equipment used to catch and track them, and in the laboratory
and office settings where data are entered, assembled and correlated. Peter
Lourie’s words and photos clearly depict the difficult conditions under which
scientists work with the bears – and the frigid land where the bears thrive, or
try to. Some photos tell the story in ways that are more immediately dramatic than
the text: a female with three cubs trying to scare off the scientists’
helicopter, a bear print that is elevated because Arctic winds have blown away
the lighter surrounding snow, a female bear lying in snow as a scientist
prepares gear to weigh and measure her, yearling male bears roughhousing, and
of course some adorable cubs. The sorts of decisions the scientists face are
clearly explained. A missing collar, for
example, needs to be located if at all possible. “Of course it’s expensive to
go find a distant collar, with the cost of fuel and time, but it’s equally if
not more important to find a collar in order to determine whether a bear has
died or has just dropped it.” A photo showing scientists with pickaxes trying
to break through ice to dig up a collar gives some idea of what is involved in
retrieval. The Polar Bear Scientists
tells as much about the people who study these bears as it does about the bears
themselves: the humans are concerned, dedicated and meticulous in their work. The
global-warming debate has continued since this book’s original publication,
driven more by political considerations than by hard science – but Amstrup puts
it into perspective after Lourie points out that the bears have gone through at
least two periods that were warmer than the current one. In those earlier warm
periods, says Amstrup, “we didn’t have nearly as many humans out there
competing with bears and otherwise affecting their security. …[A]s temperatures
rise and habitat is reduced, polar bears are going to be competing with a lot
of human uses of their environment.” The
scientists’ worry comes through not as agenda-motivated but as genuine,
well-intentioned and transcending politics.
The intentions are certainly
good as well in Blue Balliett’s Hold
Fast, a novel first published in 2013. But aside from first and last
sections called “Ice,” this book has nothing in common with the study of polar
bears. It is instead a study of people, in a cold city that is nevertheless
warmer than the bears’ Arctic habitat: Chicago. Balliett’s (+++) book is
somewhat too enamored of its own cleverness – for example, aside from the “Ice”
parts, the book contains 12 sections that all have “C” titles (“Click,”
“Crash,” “Cling,” “Clutch,” and so forth), with each word defined in several
ways before each section begins. As in her earlier books, Balliett looks into
the past for elements of this one, which springs from a major diamond heist in
2003. But unlike her prior novels, which at their best were fascinatingly
art-focused, Hold Fast is essentially
the simple story of a family sundered and eventually reunited. Balliett uses
the story as a framework for advocating, in a passing and rather simplistic
way, various causes; for example, she writes, in a note about homelessness at
the book’s end, that the solution to this major societal issue is a simple
matter of matching those without houses to abandoned and foreclosed buildings –
a “solution” whose overwhelming naïveté is less than charming. The book itself
does have charm, though, even if it comes across as somewhat too contrived. The
basic family unit consists of Dashel (Dash) Pearl; his wife, Summer; son,
Jubilation (Jubie); and daughter, Early, the book’s protagonist. The mystery
here emerges quickly, as Dash tosses out some apparently unimportant (but
perhaps crucial) number problems from a poem by Langston Hughes, and shortly
thereafter vanishes mysteriously, leaving behind a notebook containing various
numbers and a final line, “Must research number rhythms.” The disappearance,
the notebook and Hughes are all recurring themes, along with the issues of what
a home really is, what homelessness means to those who experience or fear
experiencing it, and how people make it through extremely difficult times.
Balliett goes out of her way to show how wonderful homeless-shelter operators
and volunteers are: “If one of you gets sick, we’ll connect you with medical
care. Chicago HOPES, a wonderful after-school tutoring organization, keeps a
room here with books and games in it, a place to get homework help and some
one-on-one attention.” And so on. The good guys here are so good – and the bad
ones so bad – that Hold Fast is more
unidimensional than Balliett’s other books; and the ongoing advocacy, however
well-meant and justifiable based on Balliett’s sociopolitical views, gives the
book more of a pamphlet’s stridency than is really good for it. The characters become types more than fully
formed individuals as a result, and while they endure and overcome hardship,
and Balliett pulls the plot strands together expertly, the overall feeling of
this book is that it has a point to make rather than a story to tell. Hold Fast is well written, but its
narrative is ultimately the victim of its author’s good intentions.
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