Pacific Northwest Booksellers Association Award
Booklist Top Ten Debut Novel of 2004
QPB New Voices Award nominee
Barnes & Noble Discover Great New Writers selection
Book Sense Pick and Booksense Bestseller (#38 on extended bestseller list, Dec 26, 2004)
"I've not read anything that so captures the contrast between the wild world and our ravaging consumer culture. Ordinary Wolves is painful and beautiful." -Louise Erdrich
"An astonishing book." -Barbara Kingsolver
"Here is a rare thing of beauty, a novel alive with detail about a life most of us would never experience." -Susan Salter Reynolds, Los Angeles Times Book Review "Discoveries"
"Ordinary Wolves-the first contemporary Alaska novel that seems true . . . the first one that matters." -Nick Jans, ALASKA
"A magnificently realized story." -Mark Kamine, New York Times Book Review
"Kantner takes all the hard lessons he learned growing up deep in the Alaskan wilderness and bundles them up into a commanding debut. . . . Kantner writes beautifully, but what's special about Ordinary Wolves is the author's unflinching portrayal of Alaska's social dynamic-the racial tensions, the contempt for big-game-hunting dentists, the use of cleaning solvents as booze. Messy, funny, and anything but noble, it's stridently human, and Seth Kantner gets all the blood, guts, pride, and spite down on the page." -Outside
"Shockingly beautiful. Seth Kantner's Ordinary Wolves is to the mind what a chunk of pemmican made from dried caribou, cranberries, currants and rendered fat is to the body: It's going to stick to your ribs for a long time." -Minneapolis Star Tribune
"This riveting first novel sets a new standard, offering a profound and beautiful account of a boy's attempt to reconcile his Alaskan wilderness experience with modern society. A tenderly and often beautifully written first novel. As a revelation of the devastation modern America brings to a natural lifestyle, it's a tour de force and may be the best treatment of the Northwest and its people since Jack London's works." -Publishers Weekly
"This exciting story of a white boy growing up in a sod igloo in remote northern Alaska challenges any romantic ideas about life on the last American frontier. A valuable story about a boy trying to find his place in the world. -School Library Journal