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6 Reviews
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9 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
What a great book!,
By A Customer
This review is from: Once A Wolf: How Wildlife Biologists Fought to Bring Back the Gray Wolf (Scientists in the Field Series) (Hardcover)
I just took a look at this book and was so impressed. The subject is fascinating, of course, but I'm especially taken with the clear, cogent writing, the terrific quotes, and the truly remarkable photographs. I definitely recommend this for any kid (or adult, for that matter) with an interest in wildlife.
11 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
a thoroughly moving natural history lesson for all ages,
By A Customer
This review is from: Once A Wolf: How Wildlife Biologists Fought to Bring Back the Gray Wolf (Scientists in the Field Series) (Hardcover)
My 7 year old and I read this book together recently and I think that I learned as much as she did. I knew about reintroduction of wild wolves into Yellowstone but this book told the whole story. Get ready to be impressed with personal sagas of determination and bravery on the part of people who care about wild things. In 1973, while on a field trip in Jasper Park, Alberta, I saw two wild wolves (a white and a black) bounding and romping in the snow. I will never forget the wildness of that sight. This book is richly illustrated with photographs of wolves that give you a glimpse of that wildness. Get this book and read it with a child to share what Rachel Carson called that "sense of wonder" that children have. Be prepared to explain why we systematically exterminated the wolf from its range throughout the United States and why we paid people to kill wolf puppies. This book is a moving, thoughtful lesson in ecology for children of all ages.
6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Excellent overview of the wolf's history & current issues,
By
This review is from: Once A Wolf: How Wildlife Biologists Fought to Bring Back the Gray Wolf (Paperback)
Jim Brandenberg always brings the wolf into our homes vividly and with great skill through his photographs, and in this book, these exquisite photos are paired up with the informative writing of Stephen Swinburne. Swinburne covers an excellent range of topics in this short (but highly-informative) book, including the history of the wolf's extermination in this country, early conservationists, wolf behavior and social structure, myth-busting, the Yellowstone project, and the wolf's future prospects.He brings in quotes and information from Leopold, Mech, Bangs, Askins, and many other notable figures in the wolf conservation movement to give correct facts and information. I wouldn't call this a book for younger children; it's written at perhaps a teenager's level, and younger children might find the statistics and assorted other information boring. However, Swinburne does cover the bittersweet story of wolves Numbers Nine and Ten, which personalizes the struggles wolves today face. Swinburne manages to succinctly cover most of the important issues in this relatively brief book (about a half hour's read, perhaps 45 minutes,) and it's a great way to educate yourself or someone else on the basics of wolf conservation. Highly-recommended!
3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Balancing The Scales of Nature,
By Mary-Rose Kent (oregon, USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Once A Wolf: How Wildlife Biologists Fought to Bring Back the Gray Wolf (Paperback)
A study in the perserverance and dedication of a group of people to bring the wolf back to its own enviroment in the wildernesses of Yellowstone Montanna. Full of information this book will elate you as well as sadden you, but the winner here of course is the wolf who once more runs free on his land.
5.0 out of 5 stars
Once a Wolf By: Ulysses,
By
This review is from: Once A Wolf: How Wildlife Biologists Fought to Bring Back the Gray Wolf (Paperback)
People should realize that wolves are sweet and that it took a lot of hard work to bring back the Mexican Gray Wolf of the endangered animal list.
Once there was a war against wolves. Farmers hired people to kill wolves. But a biologist kind of convinced people to release the gray wolf from Yellow Stone National Park. This book can give you a lot of information. It tells you that wolves are not dangerous. A negative is the author should describe the war against wolves or they should put more information. I will recommend it 5 stars.
0 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars
Extremely biased literature,
By
This review is from: Once A Wolf: How Wildlife Biologists Fought to Bring Back the Gray Wolf (Paperback)
This book is extremely biased. Swinburne fails to address the damage that the reintroduction of wolves has done to our livestock and to our deer and elk population. These wolves are killing our domestic pets and our livestock, leaving cattle and sheep to suffer and slowly bleed to death while ranchers wait for biologists to show up and determine if wolves are to blame for the attacks. In Lowman, Idaho, our children can no longer be left to play in the yard because the wolves are waiting for easy prey. (And what chance does a five-year-old have when a wolf can take down a bull elk or moose? Seriously...) Swinburne neglects the UGLY side of this debate, and I find this book terribly offensive.
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Once A Wolf: How Wildlife Biologists Fought to Bring Back the Gray Wolf by Stephen R. Swinburne (Paperback - February 26, 2001)
$6.95
In Stock | ||