| ISBN 978-1-60264-029-0, softcover, $13.95; 978-1-60264-030-6, hardcover, $20.95, 160 pages
An old box truck transporting wolves for release in the Adiron-dacks
crashes onto the ice covered Allegheny River. Some of the wolves do
not survive; the rest escape. Rumors
of the pack’s whereabouts reach Hawk, an old Susquehannock
storyteller, who, along with his young friend Jimmy, undertake a
journey through the Allegheny Plateau to locate the wolves. In four
days time, they plan to meet up with Sherry, Jimmy’s high school
sweetheart. Each evening, at Jimmy’s beckoning, Hawk tells a story:
Wind Wolf’s story, the story of his vision quest, the story of his
lost wife and daughter, as well as others, which when woven together
comprise the forces that forged his character. Hawk
and Jimmy meet Reba Snow, an irascible, large woman who lives alone
in the woods in a school bus. Even though she prefers to shoot first
and ask questions later, she does help the trackers find the wolves.
Storm clouds gather on the horizon as evidence is uncovered that
poachers are on the Plateau looking for black bears. Hawk and Jimmy
fear that the poachers might discover the wolf pack and do them harm. They never imagine the real tragedies they will find in the woods. ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Brian A. Connolly graduated from Edinboro University in Pennsylvania
where he received the Finnegan Award for Poetry. He completed his
graduate work at State University of New York at Oswego and Cortland,
Elmira College, and UMass at North Adams. In addition to being a
Project Adventure teacher, Mr. Connolly taught creative writing in NY
public schools for twenty-eight years before moving to Bend, Oregon to
write. He is the father of Nathan and Heather. Mr. Connolly spends
three to four months each year writing in Yellowstone and observing
wolves. “Bradley's Christmas Adventure,” a children's book of his
illustrated by Gina Diamanti, was published in 1989. “Wolf Journal,”
his first novel, was selected as a finalist for the Oregon Book Award.
Wolftagebuch,
a German translation of “Wolf Journal,” was published in 2004. A
study guide for “Wolf Journal” created by Sue Knopp was published in
2005. His short stories and poems have appeared in many literary
magazines from Maine to Washington. Mr. Connolly grew up in Port
Allegany, Pennsylvania, the setting for Hawk. |