
Winner, Saskatchewan Book Awards, Indigenous Peoples’ Publishing Award, 2021
Short-listed, Saskatchewan Book Awards, Indigenous Peoples' Writing, 2020
Turning a blind eye to the dangers of the wild can have deadly consequences.
Growing up on a northern trap line, Harold Johnson was taught to keep his distance from wolves. For decades, wolves did the same for humans. But now this seems to be changing. In 2005, twenty-two-year-old Kenton Carnegie was killed in a wolf attack near his work camp. Part story, part forensic analysis, Cry Wolf examines this and other attacks, showing how we fail to take this apex predator seriously at our own peril.