The Danger Trail

The Danger Trail

The Danger Trail

The Danger Trail

Paperback(REV)

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Overview

For perhaps the first time in his life Howland felt the spirit of romance, of adventure, of sympathy for the picturesque and the unknown surging through his veins. A billion stars glowed like yellow, passionless eyes in the polar cold of the skies. Behind him, white in its sinuous twisting through the snow-smothered wilderness, lay the icy Saskatchewan, with a few scattered lights visible where Prince Albert, the last outpost of civilization, came down to the river half a mile away. But it was into the North that Howland looked. From the top of the great ridge which he had climbed he gazed steadily into the white gloom which reached for a thousand miles from where he stood to the Arctic Sea. Faintly in the grim silence of the winter night there came to his ears the soft hissing sound of the aurora borealis as it played in its age-old song over the dome of the earth, and as he watched the cold flashes shooting like pale arrows through the distant sky and listened to its whispering music of unending loneliness and mystery, there came on him a strange feeling that it was beckoning to him and calling to him - telling him that up there very near to the end of the earth lay all that he had dreamed of and hoped for since he had grown old enough to begin the shaping of a destiny of his own.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781421821498
Publisher: 1st World Library
Publication date: 08/01/2006
Edition description: REV
Pages: 184
Product dimensions: 5.50(w) x 8.50(h) x 0.42(d)

About the Author

James Oliver Curwood was an American action-adventure author and conservationist who lived from June 12, 1878, until August 13, 1927. His stories frequently occurred in Yukon, Alaska, or the Hudson Bay region. In the early and middle 1920s, they frequently appeared in the top 10 best sellers in the US. Curwood was the most-paid author in the world (per word) at the time of his death. Curwood attended the University of Michigan after being born in Owosso, Michigan. He sold his first story in 1898 when he was a college student. He was employed by the Canadian government in 1907 to produce and publish travelogues. He spent several months each year in the Yukon, Alaska, and the Hudson Bay region in search of new inspiration. American novelist William Curwood wrote adventure novels set in the Great Northwest. Many of his stories had romance as a main or secondary story element and included animals as main characters (Kazan; Baree, Son of Kazan, The Grizzly King). His 1919 novel The River's End, which sold more than 100,000 copies, was one of his best-selling works. Throughout his career, a number of intellectual and popular journals published his short tales and other writing.

Table of Contents

IThe Girl of the Snows1
IILips That Speak Not14
IIIThe Mysterious Attack28
IVThe Warning39
VHowland's Midnight Visitor59
VIThe Love of a Man88
VIIThe Blowing of the Coyote106
VIIIThe Hour of Death126
IXThe Tryst140
XA Race Into the North151
XIThe House of the Red Death170
XIIThe Fight192
XIIIThe Pursuit206
XIVThe Gleam of the Light221
XVIn the Bedroom Chamber243
XVIJean's Story263
XVIIMeleese287
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