The North
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| WHITE FANG | VALLEY OF SILENT MEN | BALLADS OF A CHEECHAKO | BARRIER |
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An identity crisis on four feet -- was he dog or wolf? |
Where the sun still rose and set without permission of the Law |
More verse from the spellbinder of the Yukon |
Leave her I can, but not forget |
| Titles | Authors | Notes |
|---|---|---|
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An Odyssey of the North |
Jack London | It was very warm--barely ten below zero |
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Ballads of a Cheechako |
Robert Service | More verse from the spellbinder of the Yukon |
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Barrier |
Rex Beach | Leave her I can, but not forget |
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Call of the Wild |
Jack London | The timeless tale of love between man and man's best friend |
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Golden Snare |
James Oliver Curwood | A madman never forgets! |
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Iron Trail |
Rex Beach | Civilization comes to Alaska, before abandoning it again |
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Law of Life |
Jack London | He saw the flashing forms of gray, the gleaming eyes |
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Sea Wolf |
Jack London | A living dog is better than a dead lion |
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Spell of the Yukon |
Robert Service | He was a bank clerk who never mined gold, but no one ever described the Klondike better |
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Spoilers |
Rex Beach | Never a law of God or man runs north of Fifty-Three |
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To Build a Fire |
Jack London | The most comfortable and satisfying sleep of all |
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Valley of Silent Men |
James Oliver Curwood | Where the sun still rose and set without permission of the Law |
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White Fang |
Jack London | An identity crisis on four feet -- was he dog or wolf? |
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White Silence |
Jack London | All game seemed to have deserted the land |
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Yukon Trail |
William MacLeod Raine | Like cavemen they fought, crushing and twisting |