PETER HELLER is the best-selling author of The Guide, The River, Celine, The Painter, and The Dog Stars, which has been published in twenty-two languages. Heller is also the author of four nonfiction books, including Kook- What Surfing Taught Me About Love, Life, and Catching the Perfect Wave, which was awarded the National Outdoor Book Award. He holds an MFA from the Iowa Writers' Workshop in poetry and fiction and lives in Denver, Colorado.
“Heller writes in lean, descriptive, contemplative prose that often
reflects a spirit of solitude…Ren, like his literary creator, is a
philosopher at heart; you get the feeling he’d do just fine hanging
with Thoreau at Walden Pond…The thrills of The Last Ranger...should
resonate with any thoughtful reader who considers the human
relationship to the world that was here before we arrived, and,
hopefully, will be here after we shuffle off this mortal coil.”
—Chris Vognar, The Boston Globe
"The opening pages of...The Last Ranger will make you want to
become a better human. Heller’s style...is Hemingway with the
machismo scoured out of it. He can linger romantically on
Yellowstone’s atmosphere....But his observations and dialogue are
typically as clipped as Papa’s. Still, his tension within the
natural setting is more psychologically nuanced."
—Mark Athitakis, The Los Angeles Times
“Heller's best books…have a lickety-split pace and archetypal
characters whose behavior makes sense to us partly because he keeps
them mysterious, forcing us to fill in their
motivations....Throughout the novel there's a sense that good and
evil aren't as easy to separate as we'd like to believe. Maybe
Heller's point is that the ‘good guys’ are the mountains and the
streams and the ‘bad guys’ are all the people who think those
things were put here for us.”
—Chris Hewitt, Minneapolis StarTribune
"Heller’s lyrical prose captures gorgeous natural landscapes,
captivating wildlife facts, wolf folklore, and a vibrant community
of characters."
—The Christian Science Monitor
"A warning about man’s encroachment on the Western wilderness and
another variation on the solitary-man theme [Heller] does so
well....It contains some wonderful writing about endangered wolves
and the obsessive behaviorist who studies them."
—Lisa Henricksson, Air Mail
"A good story that’s intertwined like leaves afloat in a river with
the current of Heller’s descriptive powers....Filled with Heller’s
lush writing, The Last Ranger is a simple but powerful story."
—Sandra Dallas, The Denver Post
"Heller is back to creating natural vistas that make a reader want
to grab a fishing rod and plunge deep into a grove of aspens and
fish an isolated creek deep in the mountains. Where the problems of
the world are winnowed down to getting a trout to set on a fly you
tied yourself....The Last Ranger is once again Peter Heller at his
best. I’m not a fisherman, but Heller makes me wish I was one."
—Drew Gallagher, The Free-Lance Star
"The rugged nature of Yellowstone permeates every page of the
latest outdoors adventure from Heller, a tale populated with
lyrically defined characters....This is wilderness noir at its
best, a novel that will please fans of C. J. Box, Craig Johnson,
and the legions of admirers of the television series,
Yellowstone."
—Jane Murphy, Booklist
"Heller offers an immersive story of a dedicated Yellowstone
park ranger and the threats he faces down....Strong
characterizations, a vivid sense of place, enough wolf lore to fill
several NatGeo specials, and a Boy Scout Handbook’s worth of
wood-crafting tips. Fans of fiction about the outdoors are well
served."
—Publishers Weekly
"Fast-paced, elegantly written....Along with evocative descriptions
of Yellowstone’s stunning beauty, Heller efficiently creates a
small cast of fully realized characters, most notably Ren, who’s
still struggling with grief over the death of a mother who
introduced him to the natural world before abandoning her family.
But as the author displays in a thrilling climactic chase scene, he
doesn’t neglect his obligation to bring what at heart is a nature
adventure story to a satisfying conclusion....Life and death in
nature are close companions in a fast-moving and lyrical
story."
—Kirkus
"When describing wildlife and landscapes, [Heller] deploys the
precision and cadence of Ernest Hemingway....In a subplot, Heller
also dramatizes another threat to our national parks: militias and
business interests who want to turn public land into private
holdings. Heller’s swift environmental thriller reminds us that
humans are the most successful predators—but not the only
predators."
—Bookpage
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