The Bear's Embrace
A Story of Survival
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- $11.99
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- $11.99
Publisher Description
An astonishing memoir about how one woman survived a brutal attack by a grizzly bear, and how she recovered—as a survivor, a wife and a mother.
“Overwhelmingly inspirational.... Van Tighem’s story is a testament to human strength” —The Plain Dealer
On a chilly autumn morning in 1983, during a relaxing escape to the Canadian Rockies, Patricia Van Tighem and her husband were attacked by a grizzly bear. Although they survived, their ordeal was just beginning. For years Van Tighem endured numerous surgeries as doctors attempted to reconstruct her face and ease her pain. The nightmares that haunted her carried their own psychological burden. In many ways she had to redefine her sense of who she was.
Van Tighem’s tale is astonishing and beautifully written. Showing a resilience that has overcome even the most traumatic of events, The Bear’s Embrace is a truly inspiring testament to the power of the human spirit.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
In 1983, Van Tighem and her husband, Trevor Janz, were brutally attacked by a bear while hiking in the Canadian Rockies. Janz was hurt severely his nose was broken, his face needed to be stitched and his jaw wired and Van Tighem suffered even more disfiguring injuries. An attractive blue-eyed blonde before the accident, Van Tighem had to come to grips with the fact the bear had destroyed most of the left side of her face, including her eye, cheekbone and scalp. Van Tighem's head was reconstructed through a series of surgeries taking place over the next decade. But she lost her eye, and bone grafts eventually had to be removed. In addition to suffering constant and intense pain, Van Tighem (who had been a nurse) fought depression, fatigue, social isolation and marital problems, culminating in multiple stays at a psychiatric hospital. Still, Van Tighem persevered and fought her way back to resume life with her husband and four children. Her writing is candid at times, painfully so. Even more disturbing than her surgeries and facial disfigurement are her nightmares of the bear attack, which continued to haunt her long after the incident. A nurse had once told Van Tighem an Indian legend: those who survive a bear attack absorb the power of the bear. Seventeen years later, Van Tighem has faced her nightmares by writing her story, culminating with a hopeful ending to her ordeal. Harrowing and vivid, Van Tighem's narrative raises questions of random events and meaning, the bravery of surviving an attack and the fortitude of facing life with a facial disfigurement, as well as the healing power of telling and owning one's story.