Cold the Night, Fast the Wolves
Meg Long
 
   Wednesday Books
   Fiction, YA Sci-Fi
   Themes: Altered DNA, Bonded Companions, Canids, Cutthroat Competitions, Diversity, Dystopias, Girl Power, Thieves, Wilderness Stories
   ****
   
Description
Sena has lived all her seventeen years on the icy, storm-wracked world of Tundar - and spent the last five 
   desperately trying to leave. It was bad enough when her mothers were alive; one of them was a proper Corporate 
   Assembly citizen like most in the planet's only true city, the Ket, but the other was a "scavver", one of the 
   feared and frowned-upon people whose ancestors defied corporate rule and fled to live in the wilderness. But 
   they're dead now, killed in the annual race to the world's rich exocarbon deposits, which are only reachable 
   during the planet's brief winter, and - thanks to technology-destroying ion storms - only by the low-tech 
   means of sleds drawn by vonenwolves, genetic hybrids of Old Earth wolves and local doglike vonen predators. 
   With her mothers died everything Sena ever loved. It's also why, even though the only real money to be had on 
   Tundar is in the annual exocarbon races, she refuses to race herself, instead turning to thievery to try to 
   secure money for passage off Tundar to... well, she doesn't even know, but anywhere has to be better than 
   here.
   She should've known it would all go wrong...
   After a botched theft turns ugly, she flees - and winds up in the clutches of Kalba, the biggest syndicate 
   boss of the Ket. He knows who she is, and who her mothers were... and how good they were with the vonenwolves, 
   a skill he's certain she inherited. In exchange for her freedom, Sena has to patch up one of the man's prize 
   fighting wolves. After her parents died, she wanted nothing to do with the animals, but now she has no choice. 
   Against her will, she is drawn back into the world of the wolves and the races, the world that killed her 
   family. This time, though, she won't be able to run and hide. She'll have to fight back - not just for 
   herself, but for the she-wolf who becomes the closest thing to family she's had in five years.
Review
Another audiobook found via Libby's "Random" sort function, Cold the Night, Fast the Wolves takes 
   the raw Arctic thrills and dangers of dogsledding and transports it to an alien world of larger-than-life 
   predators, inhospitable terrain, cruel corporate greed, and clever, half-feral wolf hybrids. The combination 
   works surprisingly well.
   Like many similar protagonists, Sena is a girl scarred by personal tragedy after already being hardened by a 
   life of prejudice on a dystopian colony world governed by offworlder greed: those who don't risk their lives 
   on the frequently-deadly race to the exocarbon fields stay back in dens like those run by Kalba and place 
   bets on who will survive (which leads to significant violence and even sabotage on a race that's already 
   deadly enough thanks to unforgiving terrain and Tundar's local predators, not to mention rumored attacks by 
   the scavvers who famously despise the races and all the corporate avarice and folly they represent). It's to 
   the author's credit that Sena comes across as credibly jaded, not just sulky and whiny (as some such 
   characters do), even before her fateful encounter with the wounded wolf Iska... a wolf who shares the name 
   of her late vonenwolf trainer mother (not a coincidence: the human Iska used to train wolves for Kalba). 
   From the moment girl and wolf first see each other, it's clear there's a deeper bond, a spark of fate at 
   work, though of course Sena resists, too full of unresolved grief and anger to allow herself to trust 
   again... and, of course, the circumstances of their meeting, and her being forced to care for the animal, 
   aren't exactly auspicious. Iska doesn't exactly leap at the chance to bond with a human, either, after a 
   life of cages and pit fighting. But not everyone in the Ket is a monster, nor are all the racers greedy or 
   foolish; a chance encounter with an offworld professor who hopes to study Tundar's unusual exocarbon becomes 
   a lifeline when she needs it most, for all that she doesn't even know what to make of the strange man and 
   his peculiar crew when they meet. It's hardly a spoiler that, despite her protests, she ends up drawn into 
   the race itself, and that along the way she learns a lot more about herself, her wolf, and the fates of her 
   mothers, but there are several unexpected twists and turns along the way, with tension and stakes building 
   nicely and Sena (and the others) not above making some mistakes and missteps in their believably uneven 
   growth along the way. This is not a story where victory or survival are at all assured for anyone, let alone 
   easily won.
   There are a few points that wobble a bit. Mostly, I found Kalba to be a bit one-dimensional as a baddie, 
   popping up - sometimes in the literal middle of nowhere - just when things couldn't seem to get any worse 
   for Sena. Other side characters could also use rounding out a bit, or felt dropped by the wayside in the 
   rush of the race. The ending also feels like the setup for a sequel that doesn't seem to exist (yet). But 
   the heart of the story, the hard-won bond between a girl and her genetically hybridized wolf-dog amid the 
   exhilarating dangers of the icy wilderness, is a solid one.
