Before the tense drama unfolds in ($28, Crown), there鈥檚 a note from author Nate Blakeslee: 鈥淓very scene depicting wolves in this book was drawn from contemporaneous observations.鈥
It鈥檚 an important explanation, because the narrative that follows reads like a novel, in this case a family epic that chronicles one of Yellowstone鈥檚 most famous wolf packs, the Lamars, led by a charismatic alpha female, a 鈥渙nce in a generation hunter鈥 known as O-Six. Blakeslee recounts the pack鈥檚 rise in gripping detail, from its inauspicious formation in 2010鈥攚hen O-Six links up with two inexperienced brothers, referred to by some observers as Dumb and Dumber鈥攖o its eventual takeover of the prey-rich Lamar Valley, where O-Six鈥檚 grandmother once reigned, and its fierce battles with rival packs. 鈥淭he Mollies began scent trailing,鈥 Blakeslee writes of one harrowing confrontation. 鈥淭hey milled about like army ants, inhaling every trace of the resident pack鈥檚 presence, parsing what intelligence they could gather about O-Six and her considerable brood.鈥
The author鈥檚 note confronts a question that inevitably arises after reading such vivid accounts: Is this story real? It is. Blakeslee, , is a gifted storyteller, but the rich particulars of American Wolf were drawn from thousands of pages of observations documented firsthand by the crew of dedicated wolf watchers鈥斺渨olf groupies,鈥 to dismissive locals鈥攚ho have been flocking to Yellowstone National Park since the controversial reintroduction of Canis lupus in 1995. At their center is Blakeslee鈥檚 main human character, Rick McIntyre, a 67-year-old veteran biologist known as Iron Man for his 891-day wolf-sighting streak. McIntyre鈥檚 natural disposition as a prickly loner makes him an unlikely front man, but his obsession is infectious. He鈥檚 known to time wolf couplings on a stopwatch (鈥淭he better to predict when the pups might be born,鈥 he says), and his dream, writes Blakeslee, is 鈥渢o someday tell a story so good that the people who heard it simply wouldn鈥檛 want to kill wolves anymore.鈥澨
Anyone familiar with the fierce politics of wolf reintroduction knows that desire won鈥檛 be extinguished anytime soon. Indeed, a courtroom battle over hunting wolves simmers in the background as American Wolf鈥檚 B story, and from the moment O-Six lopes onstage, you know her fate is tied up in the outcome. That you can鈥檛 stop reading despite the looming tragedy is a testament to the genius of Blakeslee鈥檚 tautly constructed narrative.听

“Radio Free Vermont”听
Environmentalist and nonfiction writer Bill McKibben鈥檚 first novel, 听($22, Blue Rider Press), indulges in a particularly timely flight of fancy: seceding from the United States. The book begins with a radio host, Vern Barclay, after he鈥檚 blamed for vandalizing a big-box store. Once in hiding, Barclay begins advocating for Vermont鈥檚 withdrawal from the U.S., to avoid the tyranny of President Donald Trump and globalization. The plot can be a little twee, but if busting loose from Washington sounds like a good idea to you, it makes for fun reading.听

“White Mountain: A Cultural 国产吃瓜黑料 Through the Himalayas”听
Robert Twigger, a British poet and adventurer, explores the Himalayas from all angles鈥攕piritual, geologic, political, and historical. The result is a sprawling 听($29, Pegasus Books)听of the world鈥檚 greatest mountain range.听