Wolfish Wolf, self, and the stories we tell about fear

Erica Berry

Book - 2023

"An original and probing debut work of nonfiction by a brilliant new writer, rooted in her years-long quest to study the cultural legacy of the wolf In this enthralling, kaleidoscopic exploration of wolves both real and symbolic, Erica Berry weaves historic and scientific findings alongside criticism, journalism, and memoir to illuminate the strands of our cultural constructions of predator and prey, and what it means to navigate a world in which we can be both. From 17th-century Europeans referring to mysterious bodily sores as wolves, to contemporary xenophobia about wolves crossing national borders, wolves have long been made to carry our most entrenched sociopolitical, environmental, and bodily fears. Intimate and thought-provoking..., Wolfish is a lyrical inquiry into the relationship between humans and wolves, anchored in the dual stories of one legendary tagged wolf, OR-7, and the author. Charting OR-7's long-distance solo journey after he leaves his pack in northeastern Oregon beside the author's own roaming trajectory away from her Oregon home, Wolfish wrestles with inherited narratives around fear, danger, and the body. From her grandfather's sheep farm to a wolf sanctuary on an aristocratic English estate, Erica Berry untangles binaries of predator and prey, self and other, and wild and domestic, finding new expressions for how to be a brave woman, human, and animal in our warming world. Perfect for readers of cultural criticism, environmental writing, Rebecca Solnit, H is for Hawk, or anybody trying to navigate a world that is often scary. A timely and necessary book for current and future generations"--

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Subjects
Genres
Folklore
Self-help publications
Published
New York, NY : Flatiron Books 2023.
Language
English
Main Author
Erica Berry (author)
Edition
First U.S. edition
Physical Description
417 pages : map ; 25 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references.
ISBN
9781250821621
  • Map
  • Introduction
  • 1. Adventure v. Wolf
  • 2. Girl v. Wolf
  • 3. Town v. Wolf
  • 4. Truth v. Wolf
  • 5. Country v. Wolf
  • 6. Self v. Wolf
  • 7. Mother v. Wolf
  • Acknowledgments
  • Notes
Review by Booklist Review

Beginning with a haunting photograph of a dead wolf lying alongside a road, essayist Berry uses her obsession with another wolf, OR-7, the seventh wolf radio-collared in Oregon, to follow the story of wolves in that state and confront her own fears. What is it about wolves that they are both creatures to fear and environmental poster animals? As Berry learns about wolves and OR-7's family, she finds that her wolf obsession has affected how she reckoned with things that scare her. Her account of her journey to confront and assimilate her fears and of the wolves that arrived on their own to repopulate Oregon is hypnotic. We feel her unease at the attentions of a strange man on a cross-country train, but we also feel awe for the pioneering wolves, joy at their producing cubs, and anger and sadness at the shooting of wolves. Interlaced with myriad quotations from other essayists, scientific papers, fairy tales, and feminist writings, this blend of memoir and nature writing will call to those who delve deeply into themselves and into our relationship with the wild.

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Library Journal Review

Berry's debut nonfiction title is an exploration of more than just the biology of wolves and the nature of human interactions with these mysterious creatures; it is an analysis of the polarization that plagues modern American society, preventing many from distinguishing experiences and individuals as more than just right or wrong, hero or criminal, more nuanced than simplistic. The story of the wolves repopulating Oregon takes center stage, alongside traditional tales from Aesop to the Brothers Grimm. It is compared and contrasted with anecdotes from the author's own life, which provide a framework for examining the bigger picture--the nature of fear and how it makes some feel inclined to vilify people, places, and experiences they do not fully comprehend or have not directly encountered. VERDICT A fascinating read, perfect for fans of Mary Roach's Fuzz, or anyone who enjoys learning about wolves and what they can teach about human nature.--Jennifer Moore

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

A writer meditates on the place of the wolf in the world and in the imagination. "I am not an academic nor a scientist, I am just one animal trying to see another." So writes Berry, who opens with an unhappy story of a wolf that was collared by biologists and was clearly known to them yet was gunned down outside a small town in northeastern Oregon. Some 30 wolves have died at human hands in Oregon since the Yellowstone wolf reintroduction program began. From Yellowstone, individual animals and small packs have radiated outward to Idaho, Montana, and the eastern Pacific Northwest. Along the course of her narrative, Berry examines both their movements and the reactions of humans, sometimes based on the supposed need to protect livestock from predation but mostly out of fear. Humans fear what they don't know, and wolves certainly count, even though the incidence of wolves' attacking humans is extremely rare. Wolves, conversely, have every reason to fear humans; says one Canadian biologist whom Berry interviews, "If you experience something life-threatening, you are a different animal the very next day." The author ranges widely among the body of biological facts and mythology to paint a portrait of wolves that sometimes threatens to turn into a data dump, with a page here devoted to Indo-European linkages of wolves to unruly teenage warrior initiates and a page there to the psychological origins of lycanthropy. Even if the material is sometimes scattered, Berry offers some intriguing insights: "What if the werewolf is not shackle but solution?" While her book doesn't quite measure up to those by Barry Lopez and Rick McIntyre, it's less a field report--though Berry does travel into wolf country, meaning mostly human country populated by men, mostly, who would rather "shoot, shovel, and shut up" than welcome wolves back--than a kind of extended essay on what wolves mean. Occasionally digressive but worthy addition to the literature surrounding wolves. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.