Growing up along the northern reaches of the Pacific Coast of North America, Jimmy and Lisa hear stories about the b’gws (sasquatch) from Dad, who passes down the stories he learned from his own father, Ba-ba-oo. In Monkey Beach, the sasquatches represent both the potential magic in the world around people and a connection with the past. In the latter symbolism, Lisa maintains an emotional connection with her missing brother Jimmy whenever she recalls his obsession with the sasquatches or thinks about their visits to Monkey Beach in search of the elusive creatures. But the sasquatches, like the little man and the mysterious messages of the crows, also suggest that there are mysterious, sometimes magical forces in the world, and that people who—like Lisa, Ma-ma-oo, and Frank—are willing to hold themselves open to this possibility can receive insights and knowledge far deeper than everyone else.
Sasquatch Quotes in Monkey Beach
In front of him were more than twenty very hairy men. They looked as surprised as he was. They were tall, with thick brown fur on their chests, arms and legs. Their heads were shaped oddly, very large and slanted back sharply from the brow. One of them growled and started towards him. He panicked and bolted back into the bushes, and they began to chase him.
They were fast. He was quickly cornered at the foot of a cliff. He climbed up. They gathered at the bottom in a semicircle and roared. When they followed him up, he raised his gun and, knowing he’d probably have only one shot, picked the leader. The trapper shot him in the head, and the creature landed with a heavy thump at the bottom of the cliff. As the other sasquatches let out howls of grief, the trapper ran.