My latest article in The LineUp is here. I really love how they laid it out on the site. Below I also have the text of my draft article to make the titles searchable here on the blog. But please click through to see the finished piece. which includes links to each book.
But before we get to the list, the entire reason I wrote this piece is to have it land around the time that Nat Cassidy's When the Wolf Comes Home will come out. This book received 3 stars (including one from me), was just blurbed by Stephen King, and is really doing something new and exciting with the perennially popular werewolf trope.
You should use this list to start gathering titles for your own werewolf display-- for right now-- in April. You have MANY werewolf books, so this shouldn't be hard. Make it a while you wait for When the Wolf Comes Home display. Make it a Halfway to Halloween display. Or just embrace the next full moon with this one. But whatever you do, make it interactive by asking your patrons and staff what their favorite werewolf book or movie is.
Go here for how to turn a conversation starter into a display.
Use my article as the conversation starter online as well.
Speaking of, all of my articles for the LineUp can be used this way. All of them at this link. There are quite a few at this point.
From the Haunted Stacks: Werewolves Among Us
The transformation of the werewolf novel and how it reflects the world around us.
It struck me as a very 21st Century way to approach an ancient and well worn trope. Being a librarian whose focus is on matching books with readers, it immediately led me to think about other authors who have used the werewolf as a way to take a deeper dive into the horrors of existing in the world. Today I am sharing those with you. Nine must read werewolf novels, in the order in which they were originally released, in three distinct categories. As you read through this list, not only will you find great reads, but also you will see a modern version of the werewolf story emerge, creating a path that leads directly to Cassidy.
The Werewolf Confronts the Horrors of the Late 20th Century
These three novels published during the waning days of the 20th Century and into the dawn of the 21st were ahead of their time, so much so that two of the three did not find an audience until closer to the present as their reprints have helped to keep a new, scarier version of the werewolf alive for the next generation of writers.
The Nightwalker by Thomas Tessier (1979)
Bobby is an American Vietnam Vet, who accidentally killed his British girlfriend while over in London. At least he thinks it was an accident. But why are his hands tingling, and his anger rising? Tessier’s resurrection of the werewolf novel from near extinction not only set a precedent for confronting the horrors of modern war through the trope, but also, he allowed future writers the freedom of just allowing their werewolves to exist, without the lure of the lunar cycle
The Wolf’s Hour by Robert McCammon (1989)
McCammon takes the 20th century’s biggest villains– the Nazis– and rewrites the history of the days leading up to D-Day focused around Michael Gallatin, one of Britain’s best secret agents, spies, and killers, who also happens to be a werewolf. This sweeping alternative history epic is filled with action, accurate historical details, romance, adventure, suspense, and of course, a werewolf plying his violent power for the good of all mankind.
Shapeshifter by J.F. Gonzalez (2003)
Mark lives with the curse of being a werewolf, but he has also worked hard to keep it under control. When CEO, Bernard, finds out Mark’s secret, he uses it as a way to control Mark for his own nefarious purposes. As violent as any werewolf novel ever written, Gonzalez’s story also gives us a werewolf with heart, one that is an underdog, not an alpha dog out for revenge.
No Longer Lone, The Werewolf Moves in Packs
As the werewolf made its way deeper into the new century, it transformed once again, from loner to pack member. Here we have three critically acclaimed novels that each feature werewolves as they exist together, in groups.
Sharp Teeth by Toby Barlow (2007)
Introducing the urban wolf through a cast of characters, men and women, who can morph at will, Barlow crafts a compelling, complex, and violent story of rival packs, roaming between LA and Mexico,involved in underground crime and featuring spicy romance. Written in a free verse style where the ends of each line combine to create the illusion of literal sharp teeth, this is a striking story that continues to find readers almost 20 years after its initial release.
When We Were Animals by Joshua Gaylord (2015)
From urban pack to an entire town, Lumen Fowler harbors a very dark secret. Every teenager in her small town “breaches” with each full moon for a year after they hit puberty, transforming into beats that run wild, obsessed with sex and violence, every teen except her that is. Told as a confession from the present, the horrifying shapeshifting action lures readers in from the start, but then the tension shifts and the unease come directly from Lumen herself, her family secrets, and her denial of her true self.
Mongrels by Stephen Graham Jones (2016)
An unnamed narrator is being raised by his Aunt and Uncle in their family of werewolves. Readers follow the boy as he waits to see if he will mature into a wolf himself, learning the logistics of both surviving a life lived on the margins in modern America and attending to their werewolf needs. The novel that put Stephen Graham Jones on the mainstream map, Mongrels is many thing at once– a stirring coming of age tale that shines a light on the struggles of the underclass in America, a gruesome and violent horror story, and a novel that adds a whole new level of realism to the age old lycanthropy myth.
The Werewolf Fights Misogyny and More
The first 6 books of this list were all written by men, but as we move chronologically, women have “entered the chat,” and they are angry at having been ignored. Good thing they have the werewolf trope as a way to explore that anger and seek revenge.
Empire of the Wild by Cherie Dimaline (2019)
Joan, who has been searching for her missing husband, Victor, for over a year, hears his voice preaching from the stage of a revival tent in a Walmart parking lot. The preacher seems not to know her, but Joan, along with her nephew and an elder, know they need to fight to not only get Victor back, but also to keep everyone they hold dear safe. Dimaline’s novel is unique on this list as our heroine is not the werewolf herself, but rather, she is fighting the Rogarou, a werewolf-like creature that haunts the roads and woods of the Métis, indigenous communities of Canada.
Nightbitch by Rachel Yoder (2021)
New mom Rachel is struggling. Her husband is always on the road and caring for her 2 year old leaves no time for her art. Struggling that is until she starts to notice some invigorating physical changes, urges to eat raw meat, sharper teeth, hair in new places, and more. Think Bunny by Awad meets “Metamorphosis” by Kafka, rather than more classic werewolf fare. Thrilling, immersive, weird, thought provoking, and bursting with anger, Nightbitch is the honest, feminist werewolf novel that 21st century readers need.
Such Sharp Teeth by Rachel Harrison (2022)
Rory never imagined she would return home again, but when her pregnant twin sister needs her help, Rory makes her way back, reluctantly. On the drive home after a night at the local bar, Rory hits an animal. When she gets out to check on it, she is attacked. She survives, but is not unscathed, as she finds out with the next full moon. A USA Today bestseller, Such Sharp Teeth blends dark humor, a compelling pace, and body horror with serious contemplations of trauma, anger, and the vulnerability of love, all of it showcasing why, despite having taken its time rising to prominence, the female werewolf is not going away anytime soon.
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