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Talk:Bulldog Carney (Collection)

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Information about this edition
Edition: Toronto: McClelland & Stewart, 1919
Source: http://www.archive.org/details/bulldogcarney00fras & Project Gutenberg
Contributor(s):
Level of progress:
Notes: [Thanks to] David Widger (PG Distributed Proofreaders). Mistakes in the PG file—a surprising number in the last stor: including page headers treated as sections—have been corrected.
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Reviews

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  • The Outlook, 12 Nov. 1919: A tale of the Canadian Wild West with a fighting, law-breaking hero who has some of the traits of a modern Robin Hood. "Bulldog" is a good character and his exploits make exciting reading. The Canadian Mounted Police are sketched in a spirited way.
  • The Bookman, Oct 1918: "Bulldog Carney", by W. A. Fraser, is a story of a most gentlemanly smuggler in the great Northwest, a story which has no plot but which is a series of incidents each practically complete in itself. Carney is typical, with steel hands, cold grey eyes, soft and gentle manner, godlike marksmanship, and a nerve like a steel lamp-post. There is a slight love element which finds expression in such womanly remarks as "O you always man! You beaut! Some man, some man!" However, there is no result from these outbursts beyond the minute.