Parents' Guide to The Great Bear: The Misewa Saga, Book 2

The Great Bear book cover, with huge bear, two kids, and a warrior squirrel

Common Sense Media Review

Mary Eisenhart By Mary Eisenhart , based on child development research. How do we rate?

age 10+

Thrilling, heartfelt adventure adds time travel to the mix.

Parents Need to Know

Why Age 10+?

Any Positive Content?

Parent and Kid Reviews

age 11+

Based on 1 parent review

What's the Story?

As THE GREAT BEAR opens, Cree foster siblings Morgan, 13, and Eli, 12, are learning to be true sibs in the wake of Book 1's adventures in the fantasy world of Misewa. They're building a relationship with their kind, well-meaning foster parents, and Morgan's friend Emily always has her back. But they're dealing with a lot, as Eli's being bullied in school for his traditional long hair by bigger boys who call him a girl and won't let him use the boys' bathroom. And Morgan has just learned something important about her long-lost birth mom and isn't sure what to do. Every night, though, they go through the portal to reunite with their animal-being friends, have adventures, learn traditional ways, and share the joys of belonging. Their latest trip takes them 20 years into Misewa's past, where they meet much-younger versions of their friends -- including one who died in Book 1. It's a happy reunion, but it gets complicated, especially when the kids discover there's a new villain terrorizing their friends -- a huge bear they know as a benevolent community elder in the future.

Is It Any Good?

Our review:
Parents say ( 1 ):
Kids say : Not yet rated

David A. Robertson adds time travel to the mix in Book 2 of his heart-filled, exciting story of two Cree kids in the Canadian foster system who find a portal to a fantasy world. Here much of the story revolves around The Great Bear -- who, in Book 1, 20 years in the future, is a beloved friend, but here is a villain who's scaring his neighbors, destroying their homes, and stealing their food. Adventures are nonstop, characters are complex and engaging, and there's the occasional show-stopping scene, as when Morgan, Eli, and Morgan's BFF Emily face down a pack of bullying middle-schoolers. A terrifying cliffhanger ending leaves the reader very anxious for Book 3.

Talk to Your Kids About ...

  • Families can talk about time travel in The Great Bear. What other stories do you know that have characters who travel to fantasy worlds, have adventures, and return to their own worlds with better wisdom and coping skills? How does this happen in the Misewa series?

  • Have you read the Narnia books, which are often mentioned in the Misewa series? How do you like them? How are they similar to the Misewa stories, and how are they different?

  • There are many stories of characters who want to travel to the past to solve some problem in the present. For some reason things rarely go according to plan. Why do you think this is, and why do you think time travel stories are so popular?

Book Details

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The Great Bear book cover, with huge bear, two kids, and a warrior squirrel

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