Never Cry Wolf, by Farley Mowat.
In this amusing story inspired by the time Mowat spent in the Keewatin Barrens in the early middle twentieth century Mowat succeeds in arousing out interest in and sympathy for wolves in a way both entertaining and serious.
Whenever and wherever men have engaged in the mindless slaughter of animals (including other men), they have often attempted to justify their acts by attributing the most vicious or revolting qualities to those they would destroy, and the less reason there is for the slaughter, the greater campaign of vilification.
Regardless of how much of this book is fiction and how much is based on fact, it's well worth reading.