By Stewart Edward White
THE BLAZED TRAIL
Mr. White has intermingled the romance of the forests with theromance of a man's heart, making a story that is big and elemental,while not lacking in sweetness and tenderness. It is an epic ofthe life of the lumbermen in the great forests of the Northwest,permeated in every line by out-of-door freshness and the glory ofthe labor of the struggle with nature. It will appeal to everyonewho cares for trees, the forests or the open air.
"Mr. White has the power to make you feel the woods as the mastersof salt-water fiction make you feel the sea."--_The Boston Herald_.
"Of the majesty of the falling forests the book is eloquent, andits place in the history of our literature is secure."--_TheChicago Nevis_.
"He has realized to the full the titanic character of the strugglebetween man and nature in the forest, and has reproduced it in hispages with an enthusiasm and strength of insight worthy of histheme."--_The St. James Gazette_.
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