Books Download Free Lone Wolf (Wolves of the Beyond #1)

Identify Of Books Lone Wolf (Wolves of the Beyond #1)

Title:Lone Wolf (Wolves of the Beyond #1)
Author:Kathryn Lasky
Book Format:Hardcover
Book Edition:Deluxe Edition
Pages:Pages: 240 pages
Published:January 1st 2010 by Scholastic Press
Categories:Fantasy. Animals. Childrens. Middle Grade. Adventure. Wolves. Fiction
Books Download Free Lone Wolf (Wolves of the Beyond #1)
Lone Wolf (Wolves of the Beyond #1) Hardcover | Pages: 240 pages
Rating: 4.18 | 9228 Users | 635 Reviews

Rendition As Books Lone Wolf (Wolves of the Beyond #1)

I was really surprised that I didn't like this one. I had enjoyed what I had read of Lasky's Ga'hoole series, and I was expecting this to be comparable in quality to that. There were two main issues I had with this book. The first one is that it is horribly dull. The beginning was very exciting, but the first two parts were uninteresting. It didn't help that the main character doesn't have that much of a personality. It started to pick up around the end, but it was too little too late for me. The other issue I have is that the way the society of wolves was portrayed. It irked me to no end that Clans of wolves were considered "noble" as opposed to the cannibals living on the outskirts. Killing innocent wolf pups in the name of genetic purity is on the same level as killing one of your own to eat, in my opinion. I was expecting somewhat of a challenge to be made against their highly unethical practices. I would have liked this book a whole lot better if we had at least been given that. I suppose this might be corrected future installments, but why bother? This promised to be an exciting animal fantasy, but instead I found myself bored and irritated beyond belief by the end of the novel. Honestly, I'd recommend skipping this one and picking up something like Guardians of Ga'hoole or Warriors instead.

Mention Books Toward Lone Wolf (Wolves of the Beyond #1)

ISBN: 0545093104 (ISBN13: 9780545093101)
Series: Wolves of the Beyond #1


Rating Of Books Lone Wolf (Wolves of the Beyond #1)
Ratings: 4.18 From 9228 Users | 635 Reviews

Criticism Of Books Lone Wolf (Wolves of the Beyond #1)
My 11 year old son's rating. I've struggled with the ratings on the last several middle grade books we've listened to; that's why I'm just putting my son's rating. :-/

The first half was good but it got very boring and no plot I'm not reading the rest of the series

I was really surprised that I didn't like this one. I had enjoyed what I had read of Lasky's Ga'hoole series, and I was expecting this to be comparable in quality to that. There were two main issues I had with this book. The first one is that it is horribly dull. The beginning was very exciting, but the first two parts were uninteresting. It didn't help that the main character doesn't have that much of a personality. It started to pick up around the end, but it was too little too late for me.

Personally, it wasn't that interesting to me. It doesn't have that much... Excitement, a hook to catch me on. I mean, the main thing I disliked though was the blandness of the main character.The main character was too... How should I put this? Too overpowered. I get it's fictional, but this is based on survival and that kind of stuff, right? Then wolves should not be able to walk on two legs, be able to jump and pull down a cougar, and jump over a huge wall of fire. Like, seriously. If that

This story was amazing! It reads like a cross between The Jungle Book by Rudyard Kipling and A Wolf Story by James Byron Huggins, both of which I love and have reread many times. The story is powerful and compelling. It is the first book set in the world of Ga'Hoole that does not focus primarily on the Owl kingdoms. It was wonderful to read, and I immediately started book two after finishing book one. I could not wait until I had even written my review. I had to know what happened next.It is the

This new series, set in the world of the Guardians of Ga'Hoole, can be read completely independently. (At least, this first book apparently can, because I've only read the first Ga'Hoole book, and didn't feel at all lost or spoiled.) It tells the tale of a young wolf with a splayed paw, cast out from the pack due to his deformity. He ends up being raised by a bear, and this mix of species helps illustrate the differences in animal behavior.As with the Ga'Hoole book I've read, Lasky combines a

This book frustrated me. I loved Laskey's past series on owls so it could only be assumed that this book would be similar but with wolves. However, it wasn't. A few of my problems included - -This book was a lot of "tell" not show. There were pages of descriptions, describing wolf packs, habits, personality, behaviors. There isn't a lot of character interaction, and it almost feels like I'm reading a textbook. The author picks up conversations in the last 30 pages or so but by then it lost me.

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