Daily Press (Sunday)

In ‘Wolfish,’ Author tracks wolves and finds a history of human fear

- By Lorraine Berry Lorraine Berry reviewed “Wolfish” for the Minneapoli­s Star Tribune.

“Wolfish” by Erica Berry begins with a crime scene. “This is one of those stories that begins with a female body. Hers was crumpled, roadside, in the ash colored slush between asphalt and snowbank.” OR-106, the 106th wolf collared in Oregon, had been shot, a continuati­on of a spate of wolf killings across the state in 2021 and 2022.

Berry, who lives in Oregon, began studying wolves in 2013. In ferocious and beautiful writing, she elucidates the myths and stories we tell about our lupine fears. Like the traveling wolf in search of companions­hip, she ranges far and wide, taking readers along on her own journey — Oregon, the United Kingdom, Italy, the northern United States — in search of answers.

Wolves’ journeys from Idaho across Oregon and down into California galvanized feelings of both awe and animosity. In the Western U.S., the wolf inspires hatred from many ranchers, who, despite raising animals for slaughter, find the killing of their animals by wolves to be intolerabl­e. And while Berry attempts to understand such a contradict­ion, it’s one of the rare instances in her exemplary study where I felt shortchang­ed by the discussion. Its surfacelev­el nature contrasts with

how richly layered and complex the overall work is.

Berry recounts how fear accompanie­d her in her studies, not from the wolf, but from everyday encounters with men, and, in Italy, from a danger that she could not have anticipate­d. The most powerful theme that runs through “Wolfish” is human fear, and here Berry’s vulnerabil­ity and strength are displayed in poignant detail. While recognizin­g the cultural safeguards she has inherited as a white woman, she lays bare the real dangers posed to women, especially those traveling alone, and the media-fed paranoia that sees constant danger for women who are without the protection of a man.

In addition to the taxonomy, biology and behaviors of terrestria­l wolves, Berry argues that it’s crucial to understand the “cultural taxidermy, created by humans, fabricated with parts gathered across time and space, and howling first and foremost in our heads. The symbolic wolf is enormous.”

The symbolic wolf occupies space in the stories told by various tribes — the Kalapuya, the Pueblo and the Cherokee, for example — in which the wolf is watchdog, creator and a human relative, and in the stories of wolves that have come down to Western culture from Europe. Fairy tales, idiomatic expression­s, warrior tales all amplified human fear, and led to the systematic exterminat­ion of wolves across Britain and Europe. And if Berry is critical of these harmful stories, she also casts a cynical eye at those who claim to love the wolf, over-identifyin­g the animal with their own views of humanity.

In 2021, a mass poisoning in northeaste­rn Oregon killed off the entire Catherine pack. That deliberate, obliterati­ve act is representa­tive of how the wolf as symbol occupies much more territory in the human head than it does in the narrow bands of space it wanders on the continent.

 ?? ?? ‘Wolfish’
By Erica Berry. Flatiron Books; 432 pages. $29.99.
‘Wolfish’ By Erica Berry. Flatiron Books; 432 pages. $29.99.

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