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The Wolfen

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The Wolfen

by Strieber, Whitley

  • Used
  • first
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Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada
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About This Item

New York, William Morrow, 1978 First edition, first printing. A Fine copy in a Near Fine dustwrapper which has miniscule surface rubbing to tips and a 1/4 inch tear at head of spine. A very nice copy..

Reviews

On Mar 10 2010, Feeney said:
Most people who saw the 1981 movie WOLFEN did not like it. Many who did not view it themselves know that it was withdrawn after a brief showing and was a box office flop. I would say: rightly so. With one important note of demurral: the film WOLFEN had a great, symbolic, cinematically brilliant ending, far, far better than the ending of the otherwise vastly superior 1978 novel THE WOLFEN. ***** Wolfen are large wolf-looking creatures with amazing paws, blinding speed and advanced mental achievements, including limited telepathic ability. They are not and have never been either humans or changelings. They are not people in wolves' bodies. Wolfen look like very large wolves, if you are unlucky enough to see one. If you do see a Wolfen, you are very likely about to die. They have been around at least as long as humans. Wolfen are looked up to by their distant evolutionary cousins, the grey and red wolves, which respect men and almost never attack and kill them. Wolfen provided the basis of the legends of werewolves. Or so the novel tells us; the movie gives us little useful prehistory behind a contemporary tale set in a part of New York city largely devoid of humans, abandoned, decayed, with great hiding places for wild creatures whose safety depends on invisibility. *****Werewolves and their immemorial parasitical relation with humans, the novel tells us, were most noticed and most carefully studied in medieval and early modern France. The novel draws on alleged French sources for drawings of Wolfen and descriptions of the sign language developed with men who interacted with and protected them. There is none of this prehistory in the movie, which is senselessly padded out by a subplot of terrorists who call themselves wolves and who leave wolf pelts as calling cards at the scenes of their crimes.Nonetheless, it is the only movie that makes dramatic of a prehistory of beast/human interaction found only in the book! It does so to improve the movie's ending. The central human characters are two police officers, an older man played by Albert Finney and a younger married woman played by Diane Venora. Cornered by Wolfen in confined quarters, Finney and Diane are crouched side by side with pistols drawn and pointed at their enemies. If they shoot, they will surely kill two or three of the Wolfen, before the remaining pack members tear them limb from limb. But Finney locks eyes with the leader. Is there some telepathic understanding between the two, some ancient racial memory? Very likely. In any event, Finney points his pistol in the air, unloads it, places it on the floor and lifts his hands in submission. Venora then does the same. The Wolfen let them live. Other than its photography of a decaying New York City, this submission scene is the only thing that makes WOLFEN, the film worth seeing. And it is not in the novel. *****The novel is vastly better than the film at every level -- except the ending. In the novel, the two police characters waste at least two Wolfen (with corpses unfortunately left behind for now aware government forces to know what they are up against). Governments will very likely annihilate Wolfen worldwide. The remaining Wolfen, younger and more easily confused, run away through other policemen investigating all the noise in the apartment. ***** In either medium, DIE WOLFEN (novel) or WOLFEN (film), the theme is two species recognizing each other. Wolfen and humans have been around each other for millennia. Wolfen are carnivores and have formed the habit of eating exclusively men and women. Traditionally, they are virtual scavengers. They seek out and feed on the old, the terminally ill. What triggers the plot of both book and film is that a young, inexperienced pair attacked humans who were not marginal, who would be missed and whose disappearance and deaths would be investigated by police. Great themes. One wishes for sequels in which these two uniquely intelligent species would find a way to live together in mutual respect. -OOO-

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Details

Bookseller
NEXUS BOOKS CA (CA)
Bookseller's Inventory #
1599
Title
The Wolfen
Author
Strieber, Whitley
Book Condition
Used
Publisher
New York, William Morrow, 1978
Keywords
Werewolf, Werewolves, Lycanthrope, Lycanthropic
Bookseller catalogs
Fantasy, Supernatural, Horror & Science Fiction;

Terms of Sale

NEXUS BOOKS

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About the Seller

NEXUS BOOKS

Seller rating:
This seller has earned a 1 of 5 Stars rating from Biblio customers.
Biblio member since 2003
Vancouver, British Columbia

About NEXUS BOOKS

We are professional booksellers with many years experience of buying and selling interesting, out-of-print, collectable and rare books. We take great pride in the quality of our stock and the accuracy of our descriptions. Orders are packaged carefully and mailed promptly. Buy with confidence.

Glossary

Some terminology that may be used in this description includes:

Spine
The outer portion of a book which covers the actual binding. The spine usually faces outward when a book is placed on a shelf....
First Edition
In book collecting, the first edition is the earliest published form of a book. A book may have more than one first edition in...
Dustwrapper
Also known as book jacket, dust cover, or dust wrapper, a dust jacket is a protective and decorative cover for a book that is...
Rubbing
Abrasion or wear to the surface. Usually used in reference to a book's boards or dust-jacket.
Fine
A book in fine condition exhibits no flaws. A fine condition book closely approaches As New condition, but may lack the...

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