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The Lone Wolf
by Louis Joseph Vance
In The Lone Wolf, Louis Joseph Vance offers an adventure, fiction first published in 1914. Its central concerns include risk, movement, endurance, and encounters beyond ordinary life, approached through the possibilities of adventure, fiction. As part of a series, the book also contributes to a larger imaginative or narrative design while retaining its own identity. The book’s distinctive character comes from a brisk narrative style that favors momentum, danger, and vivid episodes. At roughly 77,405 words with an average difficulty reading profile, it offers a reading commitment that is easy to judge before beginning while still leaving room for close attention. Beyond its immediate story or argument, the book matters for its appeal as a study of courage, survival, and the urge to cross boundaries. For modern readers, the pleasure comes from entering its particular world while noticing how its central concerns still shape personal and public life. The book invites attention not only to what happens or what is argued, but also to the choices of emphasis, pacing, and perspective that shape interpretation.
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