J Daniel Reed’s tale of The First Wolf Pack draws the reader into an imaginary world of two mighty predators who must decide to survive together or fight to the death.
When an accidental hunting convergence brings two of the ancient great wolfs into mortal combat, they realize they are so equally matched they must use their great intelligence to seek a common goal: survival. Versa and Arn begin to care for each other and together derive the Wolf Ways.
Told in the manner of the great sagas, the narrator, a contemporary dog named Bingley, reveals the secret of contemporary dog heritage to his audience. Bingley’s tale is filled with lofty wisdom and bits of advice on how to be a family, not just any family but the best at parenting, the best at sharing the role of alpha couple in a pack, the best at finding nutritious food and cooperation—the first Wolf Way. Versa and Arn are notably the first at many things, including digging an inground den in which to raise their first litter.
As the family grows into the First Pack, Versa and Arn form the first wolf council, the Magnificent Ones, and establish the first Wolf Utterance. Soon the offspring grow toward maturity and ponder their parents’ ways. Why do they prosper and live in a pack and work together and not fight like the lone wolves? When an intruder is assimilated into the alpha family, they teach him their ways. The story occasionally lapses into buzzable page-turning moments such as when Versa turns to Arn and asks, “Are you as amazed at this crazy, unique life we created? There are no lone wolves who live like we or that know what we know.”
Maturity has its leaps and drawbacks, and as the pups reach adulthood, the alpha offspring male and female must be driven off to begin their own pack. Jett soon finds his mate and begins a family even while he and his sister Tria maintain a close relationship and develop wolf speak, which humans foolishly call howling.
Eventually other lone wolves outside the First Pack hatch a plot to attack, and the scattered family packs reunite hoping initially to make peace and teach the others the Wolf Ways. However, the alpha daughter, Tria, suffers from hatred, or poisoned blood, and her turmoil and anger threaten her brother’s young family and the First Pack with her vigilante ways. It takes her father to remind her of her greatness and uniqueness and why she’s driven. “Only you, daughter, share our genes, strength, and cleverness,” he tells her, “and only you can teach the wolf ways.” The advice changes his daughter’s heart, much like taking a Dale Carnegie class, the narrator explains.
The battle ensues between the First Pack and their friends, and the lone wolves who align with malicious creatures to attack the First Pack. Find out if the First Pack can maintain its integrity and survive against these as well as strange new odds.
The author has created a legend, an epic saga the likes of Gilgamesh, Beowulf, or other Norse legends of old, even faintly reminiscent of Eden and the first humans. We learn how humans and wolves intertwine. Those who love poring over those tales will thoroughly enjoy The First Wolf Pack: A Dog’s Fable.