![]() ![]() The text story is creepy enough on its own - a little doll all alone is so desperate for friends that she lets in strangers who quickly take control of her home and life. As an adult I do not like the book, but find it fascinating as a psychological artifact and a creative product. I think it would have disturbed me then, too, since I grew up in a large city and was aware of dangers such as kidnapping and child molestation at a very young age. I did not encounter this book as a child. Physically beaten and terrified of abandonment, she kowtows to patriarchal authority. When the formerly-independent Edith resists Mr Bear's domination, she is punished, never more severely than on the instance in which she attempts to shed her submissive, child-like trappings and dress as an adult, putting on lipstick and highheeled shoes. Possibly Mr Bear appropriated and "adopted" Little Bear in the same manner as he quickly assumes the parental role over Edith, monitoring her behavior and controlling her activities. Edith is on the verge of going mad from isolation when finally two strange bears appear. ![]() Perhaps there has been some apocalypse, some epidemic which wiped out all mammals. ![]() She is desperately lonely, praying every night for friends and trying to talk with the small animals who seem to be the only living things left in this deserted world. Edith lives in a lovely house and has everything she needs - except company. ![]()
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