Photograph: philippe bretelle et gallimard Nastassja Martin: ‘doesn’t seek sympathy from the reader’. She quotes Pascal Quignard: “Freeing ourselves not of the existence of the past but from its ties: this is the strange, sorry task to be performed.” She is not a model patient: not yet fully recovered, she returns to Kamchatka, to the source of her suffering. She is lifted to hospital the scenes that follow are sometimes funny – the Russian authorities want to know if she is “a highly trained secret agent sent by France (or, worse, by the US)” – and sometimes horrifying: a replacement jaw plate leads to an antibiotic-resistant infection. But the more we read, the more we can see that Martin always had something wild in her spirit. This change is in some sense literal: not just the physical legacy of the bear attack following Martin’s miraculous survival, but her sense that she is what the locals call medka, that is, “marked by the bear” in such a way that she is half-human, half-bear. What comes across repeatedly is Martin’s contrariness, her refusal to fit And so this short but chewy book thickens up into a stew of memoir, drama, anthropology and metaphysics – or how the immovable object moved, and changed. She writes of “the bear’s kiss on my face, his teeth closing over me, my jaw cracking, my skull cracking” – but, impaled by a well-placed ice axe, he changes his mind, departs, and leaves her with “features subsumed beneath the open gulfs in my face, slicked over with internal tissue”. ![]() ![]() Her story to begin with is simple, and beautifully gruesome. In August 2015, when living among the Even people of Russia’s Kamchatka Peninsula, she – the immovable object: a headstrong, combative woman – met the unstoppable force of a large brown bear. ![]() W ith her second book, French anthropologist Nastassja Martin seeks to tell us what happens when an unstoppable force meets an immovable object.
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