The Outdoor Chums in The Big Woods (Illustrated): The Rival Hunters of Lumber Run

The Outdoor Chums in The Big Woods (Illustrated): The Rival Hunters of Lumber Run

by Captain Quincy Allen
The Outdoor Chums in The Big Woods (Illustrated): The Rival Hunters of Lumber Run

The Outdoor Chums in The Big Woods (Illustrated): The Rival Hunters of Lumber Run

by Captain Quincy Allen

Paperback

$7.10 
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Overview

The Outdoor Chums in The Big Woods is the seventh volume in this eight-book series. "The outdoor chums are four wide-awake lads, sons of wealthy men of a small city located on a lake. The boys love outdoor life, and are greatly interested in hunting, fishing, and picture taking. They have motor cycles, motor boats, canoes, etc., and during their vacations go everywhere and have all sorts of thrilling adventures. The stories give full directions for camping out, how to fish, how to hunt wild animals and prepare the skins for stuffing, how to manage a canoe, how to swim, etc. Full of the very spirit of outdoor life." — Grosset & Dunlap advertisement blurb.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9785179902805
Publisher: Wise Owl Press
Publication date: 08/20/2021
Series: The Outdoor Chums , #7
Pages: 198
Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 9.00(h) x 0.45(d)

About the Author

Captain Quincy Allen was a Stratemeyer Syndicate pen name. Edward Stratemeyer (1862-1930) was born in Elizabeth, New Jersey. He was an American publisher and writer of books for children. He wrote 150 books himself, and created the most famous of the series books for juveniles, including the Rover Boys (1899 and after), Bobbsey Twins (1904), Tom Swift (1910), Hardy Boys (1927), and Nancy Drew (1930) series, among others.

Stratemeyer pioneered the technique of producing long-running, consistent series of books using a team of freelance authors to write standardised novels, which were published under a pen name owned by his company. Through his Stratemeyer Syndicate, founded in 1906, Stratemeyer produced short plot summaries for the novels in each series, which he sent to other writers who completed the story. Stratemeyer's series were also innovative in that they were intended purely as entertainment, with little of the moral lessons or educational intent found in most other popular fiction of the early twentieth century. Stratemeyer's series included, besides the famous ones, many that are now forgotten except by collectors: The Motor Boys (1906), Honey Bunch (1923), The Blythe Girls (1925) and Bomba the Jungle Boy (1926).
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