Continue exploring
For Fans and supporters of Losing June, continue your exploration of Mt. St. Helen, the culture of its Native tribes, and our Pacific Wolves with selected references material and sources
Support our Friends
Due to hunting and habitat pressure, the Gray Wolves of the Pacific Northwest and the United States only occupy 10% of their former territory.
Learn more and contribute preserving and protecting our wolves and other vulnerable animal populations with some of our trusted Animal Advocates.
The Pacific Northwest
Longview
Dennis P. Weber
Ancient Forests of the Pacific Northwest
Elliot A. Norse, Peter H. Raven
Birds of Washington State
Brian H. Bell, Gregory Kennedy
Edible and Medicinal Plants of the West
Gregory L. Tilford
Day Hiking South Cascades
Dan Nelson, Alan L. Bauer
The Cascades: the American Wilderness
Richard L. Willians & Time Life Editors
The History of Portland
History of Portland, Oregon
Hearvy Whitefield
The Shanghai Tunnel
Sharan Newman
The Pacific Northwest
Carlos Arnaldo Schwantes
Dark Rose: Organized Crime and Curruption in Portland
Robert C. Donnelly, Car Abbott
Portland Confidential
Phil Stanford
Native Legends and Culture
Indians of the Pacific Northwest
Vine Deloria Jr.
My Indian Boyhood
Luther Standing Bear
American Indian Healing Arts
E. Barrie Kavasch
Legends of the Klickitats
Clarence Orvel Bunnell
Never Cry Wolf
Farley Mowat
Myths and Legends of the Pacific Northwest
Katherine B. Judson
Mount St. Helens & Spirit Lake
"His body was rooted like the great forests and streams. His heart beat with the wild."
Truman of st. Helens
Shirley Rosen
Ray Atkeson's Mount St. Helens Impressions
Ray Atkeson
Mt. St. Helens: Surviving the Stone Wind
Catherine Hickson
Return to Spirit Lake: Life and Landscape of Mount St. Helens
Christine Colasurdo
St. Helens: 30th Anniversary Edition
Art Carney
Fire Mountains of the West: the Cascades and Mono Lake Volcanoes
Stephen L. Harris