But — and this is the best part — Vasilisa’s magic is not the convenient plot device of the lazy writer. She has no easy way out, no miracles to fix everything in her life, no one-shot kill for the demons. Throughout the book, the greater magic manifests in how she strives for her friends and her family through no strength but her own.
The prose is written in a fresh, Maximalist style, one that I haven’t enjoyed reading so much in a very long time. Arden places an adjective or an adverb at every place she is able and it works, because she doesn’t just stuff them in there; each word is carefully selected to be thematically relevant, and bring every bit of this fantasy world alive: “The wind sobbed. The trees whispered. The sun was a live thing, throwing its hot arms over their [the farmers] necks.” In Arden’s hands Rus’ isn’t fiction; Rus’ is a world that once was real, and is now real again. Arden’s novel breathes and lives and so does the world in it.
The story often crosses genres, spanning historical fiction, fantasy and feminist literature. And surprisingly, it has one of the best horror segments I’ve read in over two years now, passages that robbed me of my sleep and made me hear and see things crying and crawling in the dark.
I completed the last hundred pages in a single stretch of night, pulling myself out of Rus’s well near the chill of dawn. I thought a lot in that moment, when it was quiet and only my own breathing filled my ears, and I hoped I would dream that night, and I did, and then I continued dreaming for the many days and the many nights that followed.
Perhaps Malik was right.
Pakistan is a country for men. Maybe it wasn’t made that way, but it exists that way now. And while growing up is difficult for all of us, it is even more so for the women. It is easy for men to say that we make an effort to sympathise with women’s pains, with what it feels like to be birthed and raised in a country of oppression, in the same way we try to sympathise with the minorities, the ill, the poor. It is easy to say that we can imagine how it feels to lose out on equal opportunity, to be dictated to, to be unable to walk the streets and public places as we wish, not be allowed education or live life in a dozen or more ways as we wish to and others do. It’s easy to say, but so much more difficult to live.
But Arden’s brilliant masterpiece does its best to try and emulate that; the beautiful prose and structural excellence help the reader slip into the shoes of the protagonist, and then walk a mile and then two and then a thousand in them, all through her birth and up till the novel’s climactic finale. Vasilisa’s struggle helped me understand the everyday plight of the Pakistani woman, of having to fight to be yourself, in a much better manner than any other medium had so far.
It would be surprising if Arden’s debut is not nominated for the World Fantasy Award. With exceptional skills at building a world and an evocative imagination, The Bear and the Nightingale is a performance worth admiring, and its themes make it a significant work of fantasy fiction that everyone should read. With this being just her debut, it’s exciting to see what Arden will conjure next.
The reviewer is a student at the Lahore University of Management Sciences and an editor at the LUMS Business Review
The Bear and the
Nightingale
By Katherine Arden
Del Rey, US
ISBN: 9781101885932
322pp.
Published in Dawn, Books & Authors, October 15th, 2017