
A weather‑worn steamer slips into the shallow bay of Kettletoft, the low‑lying houses of Sanday seeming to rise out of the sea. Jim Peace, a former Hudson Bay Company man, watches the familiar shoreline with a mix of longing and unease after three decades in the far‑north wilderness. Now forty‑eight, he has saved his earnings and left the remote post to confront the life he once fled.
The island’s stark, treeless dunes awaken memories of childhood games, sea breezes, and the simple rhythms of a world far removed from the endless forests that haunted his years abroad. Yet beneath the nostalgic tide lies a tension – a knot of figures on the pier, the presence of his brother, and the faint, unsettling echo of wolves that once haunted the northern wilds. As Jim steps onto the sand, he must decide whether the past can finally be laid to rest or if old shadows will follow him home.
Language
en
Duration
~10 hours (589K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by David Starner, eagkw and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This book was produced from scanned images of public domain material from the Google Print project.)
Release date
2011-12-15
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1869–1951
A master of eerie, atmospheric fiction, these stories blend wilderness, mysticism, and the uncanny in a way that still feels fresh. His tales of ghostly presences and unseen forces helped shape modern supernatural literature.
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Best remembered for eerie, old-fashioned supernatural fiction, this elusive early-20th-century writer is chiefly associated with The Wolves of God and Other Fey Stories, a 1921 collection created with Algernon Blackwood. Very little biographical information survives, which only adds to the book’s strange, half-hidden appeal.
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by Algernon Blackwood

by Algernon Blackwood

by Algernon Blackwood

by Algernon Blackwood

by Algernon Blackwood

by Algernon Blackwood

by Algernon Blackwood

by Algernon Blackwood