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BRILLIANT WHITE PEAKS by Teng Rong

BRILLIANT WHITE PEAKS

by Teng Rong

Pub Date: Sept. 14th, 2021
ISBN: 978-1-77785-850-6
Publisher: Teng Rong

A wolf comes of age and finds his place in the world.

In this debut novel, a wolf goes from vulnerable cub to independent adult, navigating a landscape where the weather and other animals can be beneficial or dangerous. The book opens with the unnamed narrator as a sheltered young pup, just beginning to meet his family (young sister, White-Ears; Ma and Pa; and older brother, Scruff-Paw) and explore the world outside his den. The narrator and White-Ears learn to hunt, read the messages left by other animals, and be on guard against threats. After Scruff-Paw fights with his parents and leaves to make his own way in the world, the family heads west, looking for more safety and better hunting on the coast. During the journey, the narrator and White-Ears are left alone when their parents face off against an unfamiliar pack of wolves. When it becomes clear that Ma and Pa will not be returning, the two siblings head for the coast. White-Ears is injured, and the narrator takes care of her, stealing food from a wolf he dubs Notch-Tail. After his sister bonds with another wolf they meet, the narrator takes off alone to search for his parents one last time. He faces new dangers, fights to survive, and eventually reconnects and mates with Notch-Tail. The pair’s cubs face tragedies of their own, and the wolf family continues to find moments of joy where it can. Rong does an excellent job of transforming the wolves into dynamic characters, with needs and emotions that are compelling to readers but not overly humanlike, differentiating them with plausible quirks, like the narrator’s love of fishing. The descriptive language is vivid, particularly when it comes to the narrator’s hunting and feeding sessions (“I reached into the belly and pulled out a chunk of meat, and I ate it whole, feeling the tender strands pop in my mouth, mashing against my teeth before sliding down my throat”). The solid story delivers a generally satisfying coming-of-age plot that celebrates the natural world without romanticizing it.

A captivating animal tale that explores universal themes.