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R**
Wow! My 4th Graders Want More From This Author!
My 4th Graders absolutely LOVE this book. I was looking for a read-aloud chapter book that would appeal to my male students after finishing reading a book with a strong female lead character which was also written from 3rd person perspective. I searched for books with wolves and found this one, written from the 1st person perspective of OR7, a wolf.It's been an incredible literary journey for us, even my girls are invested in OR7's journey (also known as Swift and Wander). I also purchased the Audible version to accompany the reading of the chapter book to the class and the narrator's voice! Wow! So believable, so HIM. The expression, the exasperation, the exhaustion, the sense of wonder and disgust and disbelief along with realizations that OR7 experiences in this WELL-WRITTEN book are brought to LIFE by the narrator.The illustrations! Even in black and white - - - the detail and clarity and precision had us mesmorized. Stunning visual journey. Bravo.I started off this chapter book with the back section of the book which is full of background information on the real life wolf OR7's journey map across the northwest US. Then we read the sections about wolf paw prints vs bear paw prints and the typical prey that wolves eat. That entire back section is GOLD.This book perfectly incorporates life science learning! So many innate and learned behaviors, life cycle, food web, environmental impact (black ice, warm glass), human/animal conflict...........this is a new FAVORITE book for me. Several students bought their own copy because they couldn't wait for our class to finish the book. They WANT to read and this author has tapped into what interests 4th graders! Bookmunchers want more from this author.
N**L
Good book for my 5th grader
My 5th grader who lives animals absolutely destroyed this book in 2 days. She loved it!
M**J
Cute book
Such a cute little story for my 8 year old who loves wolves. Great book and highly recommend!
R**S
Not just for young readers
I don't think I can adequately describe how much I loved reading this book. Most of my acquaintances would tell you I'm a cat person, but I've long considered the wolf to be my spirit animal (apologies to Natives who would take offense at the appropriation). Everything about them calls to my soul. For that reason, I can't believe I haven't found this book before. Although it's considered a youth read, it made this fully adult - and then some - reader cry real tears more than once. The behaviors and motivations are so beautifully described, and the illustrations are nothing short of wonderful. That it's based on the travels of a real Oregon wolf make it that much more satisfying. I can't recommend it strongly enough. Long live Warm!
M**Y
Novel based on real life wolf
Swift is part of a mountain wolf pack in the Pacific Northwest and is learning how to hunt and contribute to the group's thriving livelihood when a rival pack charges in, kills the pack's leadership and most of his siblings, leaving him homeless and roaming. Parry's book takes us through his traumatic and true to life experience from the young wolf's perspective and continues in that vein as Swift searches for a place to call his own. The backmatter informs the reader that "Swift" is a real wolf, dubbed OR-7, who was outfitted with a radio collar and his travels are authentic, even though the specific events are merely speculative, but realistically so. Parry does a great job of recording the behaviors of a young wolf, but does "humanize" the possible thoughts and feelings of the feisty predator. Along with a fast-paced and engaging storyline, artist Monica Armino provides frequent black and white illustrations that elevate the book's appeal and will hopefully hook some of the more reluctant readers in the target group of grades 4-6. Readers of Applegate's "Ivan," Martin's "A Dog's Life," and Gemeinhart's "Good Dog" will love this one. No worries about language or sexual content and the violence is strictly the realistic, animal on animal variety. Terrific 2020-2021 Texas Bluebonnet Award nominee.
N**.
A wonderful book
It is about wolves, their family structure, how they live and hunt. It is at times exciting and scary. I suspect it is scientifically correct. Highly recommended!
M**L
Excellent nature read for the whole family (my 6 year old twins loved it)
We loved a Wolf Called Wander, I read 1-2 chapters per night to my twin boys and they loved it. It brought up interesting conversations about nature, family, friendship, compassion, and much more. I highly recommend this one for anyone with elementary aged kids.
D**G
Great price and book!
This book is very interesting and has pictures throughout it which can keep you entertained. Great for anyone who wants something new to read, I enjoy how it surrounds a true story. Good quality and the price is really good. Detailed pictures. I don’t really have any bad to say except that the cover can obviously bend easily if it’s paper back but that’s not anyone’s fault. If you like wolves or reading about animals, perfect book for you! <3
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