6–35449.
Descriptive note in Annual, 1906.
“It is a capital story, marred a little by the brutality of detail given in the fight with the bull-dog.”
| + − | Acad. 72: 274. Mr. 16, ’07. 220w. |
“His tale is packed full of absurdly precious idioms, literary ‘clichés’, and pompous little mannerisms.”
| + − | Ath. 1907, 1: 161. F. 9. 270w. |
“The illustrations by Charles Livingston Bull are not the least good thing about the book. The virility of this artist is as strong and as alive as that of the author he companions, but there is a greater sense of self-control in it, a power of restraint and reserve which makes his work a lasting delight.” Grace Isabel Colbron.
| + + | Bookm. 24: 599. F. ’07. 950w. |
“The manner in which the author manages to interest one in the history of the wolf is an achievement.”
| + + | Current Literature. 82: 111. Ja. ’07. 500w. |