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The Wolf Divide
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25 May 2027
Follow the gray wolf’s remarkable recovery—and the science, politics, and personal stories behind one of America’s most challenging conservation debates.
Few wildlife stories have sparked as much passion—or as much conflict—as the return of the gray wolf. Once nearly eliminated from the Lower 48, wolves have made a remarkable comeback across parts of the Upper Midwest. Their recovery is widely celebrated as a conservation success, yet it has also reignited difficult questions about livestock, hunting, public safety, and the future of rural communities.
The Wolf Divide by Cary J. Griffith takes readers beyond the headlines and into the forests, farms, ranches, and meeting halls where those questions play out every day. Centered on Minnesota and the Great Lakes region, this narrative follows ranchers protecting their herds, wildlife biologists tracking wolf packs through remote forests, conservationists working to preserve a recovering predator, and public officials navigating some of the most challenging decisions in wildlife management.
Along the way, readers discover the science behind wolf behavior, the remarkable story of the species’ recovery, and the complex legal battles surrounding endangered species protections. The book explores innovative coexistence strategies—from guardian animals and predator-resistant fencing to new approaches for reducing livestock conflicts—while acknowledging that many questions remain unresolved.
Thoughtful, balanced, and grounded in firsthand reporting, The Wolf Divide reveals that the wolf debate is about far more than one species. It is about conservation, rural livelihoods, public policy, and the difficult choices that arise when people and large predators share the same landscape. Whether you’re a wildlife enthusiast, hunter, conservationist, landowner, or simply fascinated by one of North America’s most iconic animals, this book offers an insightful look at one of today’s most important conservation stories.
Book Features:
- Explores the recovery and management of gray wolves in Minnesota and the Great Lakes region
- Features firsthand stories from ranchers, hunters, wildlife biologists, conservationists, and public officials
- Explains wolf behavior, pack dynamics, and modern field research
- Examines the Endangered Species Act, livestock depredation, and wildlife policy
- Highlights practical coexistence strategies, including guardian animals, intensive grazing, and predator-resistant fencing
Award-winning author Cary J. Griffith earned a B.A. in English from the University of Iowa and an M.A. in library science from the University of Minnesota. His books explore the natural world. In nonfiction, he covers the borderlands between civilization and wild places. In fiction, he focuses on the ways some people use flora and fauna to commit crimes, while others with more reverence and understanding of the natural world leverage their knowledge to bring criminals to justice. He lives with his family in a suburb of Minnesota’s Twin Cities.
A Noteworthy Meeting
Part 1: Wolves in America: From Abundance to Extirpation and the Road to Their Return
Part 2: The Wolves Return
Part 3: An Apex Predator
Part 4: The Problem & Promise of Wolf Management
Part 5: Human Conflict
Part 6: A Note About Trophic Cascades
Part 7: “Death, Taxes & Wolf Conflict”
Acknowledgments