Rules for Werewolves


Book Description

In the tradition of Colson Whitehead’s Zone One, a visionary debut novel about shelter, escape, family, violence, and dumpster-diving It’s the story of a restless group of young squatters. They’ve run away from their families and their pasts, questing after knowledge of their most wild selves, roaming the half-empty suburbs of America, occupying the homes of the foreclosed or vacationing, never staying in one place long enough to attract attention, while shoplifting beer at the local Speedy Stop. They’re building a new society with new laws, and no one will stand in their way. But utopias are hard work, and as Rules for Werewolves unfolds, these young revolutionaries discover that it’s much easier to break laws than to enforce them. Narrated in the shifting perspectives of the pack, Rules for Werewolves follows a community of drifters on the move, who seek a life in a wilderness that, by definition, has no room for them, and a freedom for which they may not be entirely prepared. Kirk Lynn’s debut novel is a hilarious and deeply moving story of people trying—and failing—to create a new life. At once a fractured fairy tale and a haunting vision of American disaffection, Rules for Werewolves marks the arrival of a fierce new talent.




Rules for Werewolves


Book Description

Set in a society where dumpster-diving is the norm and half the houses are empty because there's no one left to live in them, Rules For Werewolves projects itself into the future to reveal the present. Following a group of drifters, outcasts and refugees whose only means of survival is to occupy foreclosed homes, Lynn paints a dark and violent picture of a society coming together and falling apart. Written entirely in dialogue, this sort-of werewolf novel is an absolute treat for literary genre readers.




Werewolves Don't Go To Summer Camp (Adventures of the Bailey School Kids #2)


Book Description

The hugely popular early chapter book series re-emerges -- now in e-book! The new director at Camp Lone Wolf seems like a nice guy. But when the kids learn the legend of a local boy who disappeared and the wolf that prowls the campgrounds howling in the night, they start to wonder if Camp Lone Wolf is more than just a name. Mr. Jenkins is covered in hair, eats his meat almost raw, and has an obsession with wolves. But could he really be a werewolf?




Werewolf Club Rules!


Book Description

Do not talk about Werewolf Club! You can howl about it, But never talk. Do not walk to Werewolf Club! You can bound to it in moonlight, But never walk. Find out the mysterious rules of Werewolf Club, how to look like a rainbow, what happens when puppies fall in love - and how to fold up your gran! This is an exciting debut poetry collection from a young poet who is already performing his work successfully at venues across the UK.




Laws of the Wild


Book Description

Very few games seek to redefine the conventions of roleplaying as does the Mind's Eye Theatre line. There are no tables or dice involved in Mind's Eye Theatre games. Instead, you become a part of the story. You assume the role of your character as soon as you step through the door, enacting every action, movement and gesture. For the purposes of the game, you are your character. From the shrinking wild places to the sprawling cities, the signs are everywhere -- the Apocalypse is nigh. Gaia needs Her warriors more than ever in these desperate days. -- Laws of the Wild Revised is the updated rulebook for playing the mighty Garou in live-action games. Based on the revised edition of Werewolf: The Apocalypse, this book makes new rules and advanced storylines available in Mind's Eye Theatre.




The Werewolf's Bride


Book Description

THE WEREWOLF'S BRIDE Alpha Wolf Shifter Paranormal Romance Novel By New York Times & USA Today Bestselling Author Michele Bardsley Every 20 years, the Shadow Pack arrives in the small desert community of Bleed City, Nevada. To honor the pact made 150 years ago with the werewolves, the town offers up their eldest daughters for the Choosing--a ceremony where the shifters pick their virgin brides. Like most werewolf packs, the Shadows need human females for mating and breeding so they can replenish their werewolf bloodlines. Arabelle Winton considers the entire process somewhat barbaric, but as the oldest female in her family, she must take her place among the other women. What she doesn't expect is to catch the interest of Alpha Greyson Burke. Yes, Grey can have her body any way he wants... but Belle will never give her heart to a werewolf.







Werewolves Rule


Book Description

This is the second book in the Rule Series. A new hunter shows up in Bliss, and she's determined to get her hands on Jack, despite Silver's protests. The head werewolf has left town... or has he? Jack suspects Jersey is spying on him and building an army to defeat him. In the meantime, Billy is hunting a dangerous pack on his own. When he disappears, they all think he's dead. But it's worse than that. Will Jack and Silver be able to survive the growing werewolf army?




Werewolf Club Rules


Book Description

Do not talk about Werewolf Club! You can howl about it But never talk. Do not walk to Werewolf Club! You can bound to it in moonlight But never walk. Find out the mysterious rules of Werewolf Club, how to look like a rainbow, what happens when puppies fall in love - and how to fold up your gran!




The Nature of the Beast


Book Description

The werewolf in popular fiction has begun to change rapidly. Literary critics have observed this development and its impact on the werewolf in fiction, with theorists arguing that the modern werewolf offers new possibilities about how we view identity and the self. Although this monograph is preoccupied with the same concerns, it represents a departure from other critical works by analysing the werewolf’s subjectivity/identity as a work-in-progress, where the fixed and final form is yet to be arrived at – and may never be fully accomplished. Using the critical theories of Deleuze and Guattari and their concepts of ‘multiplicities’ and ‘becoming’, this work argues that the werewolf is in a state of constant evolution as it develops new modes of being in popular fiction. Following on from this examination of lycanthropic subjectivity, the book goes on to examine the significant developments that have resulted from the advent of the werewolf as subject, few of which have received any sustained critical attention to date.