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Charles G. D. RobertsRezensionen

Autor von Red Fox

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Three stars might be a bit generous for this one although it is an easy read not too boring. However it's very much stuck between two worlds.
It starts off moving through time in a very interesting manner, which seemed to involve transmigration of the souls. However once it gets to caveman times it stops and turns into more of a pulp adventure.
It gets so pulpy i thought at times it had inspired Howards' Conan tales but that was partly because i mistook the main heros name as Crom. The god of Conan, it isn't its Grom.. sorry i mean Grôm, because cavemen were very big into circumflexes. Anyway you can see why i might have thought it related to Conan when you have passages like this one.

"See," said Grôm, "I have made the bright Dancing Ones my servants. The tribe shall come here. And we shall be the masters of all things."
Once more the girl threw herself at his feet. He seemed to her a god. But remembering how she had twice saved his life, she laid her cheek against his knee. He lifted her into the hollow of his great arm, and she leaned against him, gazing up into his face, while he stood staring into the fire, his eyes clouded with visions.


However the books intent is obviously far more pointed and educational feeling. Even if its grasp of history is pretty terrible and it's plagued by the authors own sexist, racist and Manifest Destiny style prejudices.
The novel ends very abruptly too despite earlier attempts to setup some further story lines involved the main characters children but all that is cast aside.

The main issue as i said at the start is that its an inbetween work. Its obvious attempts at mythologising the rise of the white male to his predestined rule over the world are interrupted (thank god) with its very pulpy adventure elements. Some of which even Edgar Rice Burroughs might have rejected as being too outlandish.

In conclusion its an interesting piece which feels like "10,000 Years B.C." if it was paid for by like a church group or something.
Edit: Or to put it another way, its half caveman docudrama half wacky pulp adventure.

Made available by the Merril Collection.
 
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wreade1872 | Nov 28, 2021 |
I read one of the short stories in this collection, The Vagrants of the Barren. In this tale, the protagonist awakens suddenly two hours before dawn in midwinter to find his cabin ablaze. He escapes with his blanket, his coat, his rifle, his larrigans (footwear), and the clothes on his back, not too bad as he slept almost fully clothed. So that's the setup for a survival tale. The description of the cabin fire sounds like he overloaded the stove instead of starting an overnight fire. Tenderfoot trick. Never explained. All through the story I kept thinking, the author seems to know about woodcraft and survival... but what about that fire... he describes Pete as awakening every hour to build up his bivouack campfire... we do that with our woodstove on the cold winter nights when it's minus 25, but how could Pete have not done that in his cabin... And then he didn't notice a blizzard coming either. The fellow is seriously obtuse.

By the time Pete secures his survival in extremity by spending a day and part of a blizzardly night tracking a herd of caribou, slitting the throat of a collapsed animal only slightly more exhausted than himself, and drinking its blood, I was tired of the whole scenario.
 
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muumi | Sep 18, 2021 |
 
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jayln | 1 weitere Rezension | Oct 31, 2018 |
I kept imagining this story being told to the author's children on a Christmas Eve night; the family happily gathered around a roaring fireplace.
Ironically, it looks like it was written well after Roberts permanently left his family behind in the pursuit of his career as a freelance writer.
The story tells of a cat inadvertently left behind on a small island, when the family that summers there goes home for the winter. Originally called 'Marooned,' it's a classic survival tale, as the pampered pet learns new skills to stay alive
 
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AltheaAnn | 1 weitere Rezension | Feb 9, 2016 |
A thoroughly engaging story of a red fox in the Canadian wilds. Well-written, realistic, without being overly sentimental, this story should please lovers of nature. As ever in the wilds, death and danger are present in the lives of animals, but this author does not glorify the harsh reality of the north woods.

Tamer and kinder than similar books of its era (such as those written by Jack London), it is appropriate for youth or adult reading. Recommended.½
 
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fuzzi | 1 weitere Rezension | Oct 31, 2014 |
Collection of stories about wild animals as seen from the non-anthropomorphized perspective of the animals themselves. An interesting read, the man was clearly a keen observer of nature, but the stories were just not all that exciting.
 
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Georges_T._Dodds | Mar 29, 2013 |
The lifestory of a fox in the Canadian woods. It is based on observations of wild foxes, many true-life incidents all complied into one adventurous story. The hero of Red Fox is the largest of his litter, stronger, braver and smarter than the rest. He learns survival lessons and hunting skills from his mother, also from his siblings' blunders and his own mistakes. He must outwit his prey, deal with changing weather conditions and confront or avoid other predators- mink, lynx, eagles, bears, rival foxes. By the time he is an adult he knows how to outwit dogs and farmers, but then a young boy who has been quietly watching him helps trap the fox and tries to tame him. That failing, he sells the fox, thinking the animal will be taken to a zoo. But Red Fox is let loose on the grounds of a foxhunting club, where he must use all his wits against the hounds if he wants to gain his freedom again. The story ends a little abruptly, but otherwise I enjoyed it. The pen-and-ink illustrations by John Schoenherr are quite nice.

from the DogEar Diary
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jeane | 1 weitere Rezension | Nov 12, 2009 |
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