"A vital and howling missive of a book. Lookout holds the wide wisdom and fierce beauty of the boreal forest it depicts. She writes as a wild and erudite witness, bursting with hunger and feral passion for the living world."-- "Kyo Maclear, author of Birds Art Life: A Year of Observation "
"Trina Moyles has written a beautiful, closely observed love letter to the boreal forest and the wilderness of northern Canada at a time when it is threatened by unprecedented change. A powerful, unforgettable story about the ways that solitude in nature can break us down, and then put us back together again." -- "Eva Holland, author of Nerve: A Personal Journey Through the Science of Fear"
"Moyles tells a totally engrossing story of fear and love, self-recrimination and healing, by turns vivid with memory and presence. Page after page, I felt immersed in the rejuvenating wonders of the natural world, rendered here in all their magnificent, everchanging detail. Reader, you will roar through this book."-- "Charlotte Gill, author of Eating Dirt"
Praise for Trina Moyles "Trina Moyles is a natural storyteller. As a novice fire lookout, she retreats into the bush, her heart and self-trust broken, all while a record-breaking wildfire rages toward her. Courageous, vulnerable, funny and enthralling. Above all else, it imparts a much-needed message of hope and regeneration."-- "Jan Redford, author of End of the Rope: Mountains, Marriage, and Motherhood" "Trina Moyles delivers a captivating yet heartbreaking exploration of the threads that bind us--to the wild, to each other, and to ourselves. With lyrical precision, she draws haunting parallels between the rhythms of the natural world and the complex, often fragile dynamics of family. Far more than a work of natural history, Black Bear is a profound meditation on loss and the enduring connections that shape our lives. One of the best books I've read in years. This touching narrative will be hard to forget."--Gloria Dickie, author of Eight Bears, a New Yorker Best Book of the Year
"Black Bear isn't just a beautifully written memoir of nature and family. It calls on us to notice, to appreciate, to examine the world and our place in it. Trina Moyles tells her story in a way that will make you think differently about your own."--David Litt, national bestselling author of It's Only Drowning
"I read Black Bear late into the night, heart splitting open with Trina Moyles' astonishingly witnessed exploration of how both bears and humans navigate solitude and connection. Perfect for fans of H is For Hawk, this book is an indelible portrait of siblinghood that will make readers think deeply not only about how we live with both ursine and human beings, but what it means to navigate the 21st century while working closely with the land, whether in the oil fields or as a fire lookout."--Erica Berry, award-winning author of Wolfish: Wolf, Self, and the Stories We Tell About Fear
"Moyles' heart-clenching memoir about siblinghood and bears shows us the value of embracing what scares us. Moyles' brilliantly balances the human and animal worlds in a way that will leave you loving each one a little more. I couldn't put this down."--Tove Danovich, author of Under the Henfluence
"In this down-to-earth memoir, environmental journalist Moyles intertwines her experience losing a sibling to drug addiction with the story of how she learned to coexist with bears. Through keen observations and captivating storytelling, Moyles shows that survival is about finding inner peace and learning to overcome fears. This personal history goes straight to the heart."--Publishers Weekly, starred review
"It started with an orphaned bear cub and ended with loss and new life. Moyles (Lookout, 2022) opens her memoir with a small moment: her father, a wildlife biologist in their Alberta, Canada, community, brought a bear cub home for the night before taking it to the Calgary zoo. Readers watch Moyles' fascination with bears grow from there, especially when she works as a fire-tower lookout and observes a group of bears living nearby. At the same time, she struggles with seeing her older brother Brendan battle addiction and work in the oil industry. Moyles' greatest strength lies within her prose. In sharing scientific terms and statistics, she also relates an emotional ache: the ache of finding where someone fits within your life after years of estrangement and the tiny undercurrent of fear that you'll lose them all over again."--Booklist