77 pages 2 hours read

Will Hobbs

Bearstone

Fiction | Novel | Middle Grade | Published in 1989

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Further Reading & Resources

Further Reading: Literature

Beardance by Will Hobbs

In the sequel to Bearstone, Cloyd and Walter return to the San Juan Mountains in search of a fabled Spanish gold mine. Cloyd sees a mother grizzly—possibly the mate to the grizzly killed by Rusty—raising two cubs. When she dies, Cloyd tries to protect the young bears until they can hibernate.

Dances with Wolves by Michael Blake

The book version of the author’s Oscar-winning screenplay tells the story of white Civil War Army officer John Dunbar, whose visit to a community of Native Americans on the Great Plains changes his life. He realizes that their world is threatened by white invaders and joins them as a fellow warrior. Published around the same time as Beardance, the story likewise includes an encounter with a wilderness predator—a wolf who, like Cloyd’s grizzly, is targeted by visiting hunters.

Further Reading: Beyond Literature (Nonfiction)

Bearstone and Beardanceby Will Hobbs

In this article, the author describes how Cloyd and Walter’s stories came about. The two characters are based on real people: The author’s wife, a teacher, worked with an inspiring Ute student in Durango who struggled with homesickness; Hobbs labored one summer on a ranch whose elderly owner dreamed of restarting his gold mine up in the mountains. A grizzly bear was killed in the San Juan Mountains in 1979, and that report inspired Cloyd’s encounter with a doomed bear.

Grizzlies are central to Cloyd’s spiritual quest. This overview of grizzlies, prepared by the National Wildlife Federation, includes descriptions of the bears’ food sources, behavior, life cycle, and conservation status.

This website is the home page of the Ute Mountain Reservation of Weeminuche Utes, the lineage from which Cloyd descends. The site includes images, a brief history, a video (see “Video & Podcast resources” below), and links to visitor information.

Cloyd’s father is Navajo, and his culture influences the Ute traditions of Cloyd’s grandmother. The website contains links to information on the history, culture, politics, and current events of the 250,000 Navajos who live on the largest reservation in the US. (The title of the home page includes “YÁ’ÁT’ÉÉH,” a welcome that means, roughly, “Hello” or “It’s good to see you.”)

This site contains many photos of the region through which Cloyd and Walter travel, plus links to educational and volunteer programs.

Video & Podcast Resources

Cloyd is a Weeminuche Ute, a people who once roamed the San Juan Mountains and who today control the Ute Mountain Reservation in southwestern Colorado. This video describes the reservation’s efforts to conserve its Ute culture and language.