Bari, chien-loup by James Oliver Curwood
(4 User reviews)
928
Curwood, James Oliver, 1878-1927
French
"Bari, chien-loup" by James Oliver Curwood is a wilderness adventure novel written in the early 20th century. It follows Bari, a wolf-dog born to the blind she-wolf Louve-Grise and the dog Kazan, as he grows into the northern wilds, pulled between his wolf instincts and his dog nature. Encounters with predators, prey, storms, and humans shape a sur...
The opening of the novel traces Bari from birth in a fallen tree, through his first sunlight and moonlit nights, to early lessons in killing when Kazan brings a rabbit. A reckless tussle with a young owl sends him tumbling into a river; lost and terrified, he endures a thunderstorm, witnesses bear and moose at close range, and nearly starves crossing a burned forest before stealing a freshly killed grouse from an ermine. Regaining strength by catching young rabbits, he wanders into a trapline where the Métis trapper Pierre and his daughter Nepeese appear; Nepeese wounds him with a shot, but he hides and escapes. Nursed by anger and instinct, he later battles an old great owl and wins, gaining confidence as he limps on into the northern night, still a solitary wanderer. (This is an automatically generated summary.)
Robert Taylor
5 months agoFor a digital edition, the pacing is just right, keeping you engaged from start to finish. I learned so much from this.
Kevin Johnson
2 months agoFrom the very first page, the translation seems very fluid and captures the original nuance perfectly. I couldn't put it down until the very end.
Betty Harris
2 months agoI have to admit, the plot twists are genuinely surprising without feeling cheap or forced. I'm sending the link to all my friends.
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Joseph Perez
3 months agoIt took me a while to start, but the logical flow of arguments makes it an essential resource for research. It is definitely a 5-star read from me.