The Seventh Man/End matter
A Selection from the
Catalogue of
G. P. PUTNAM'S SONS
Complete Catalogues sent
on application
A Tale of Wild-riding Herdsmen and
Outlaws, and their Deeds of
Daring and Deviltry
By
Max Brand
A well-known English critic said of The Untamed—"There are in it passages of extraordinary power—the whole conception is very bold." And no less bold nor less powerful is its sequel The Night Horseman. Once again we ride in company with "Whistlin' Dan," the fearless, silent, mysterious chap who shares the instincts of wild things, and once again we engage with him in his desperate adventures, hair-breadth escapes, and whirlwind triumphs. A novel thrilling in its reality, which will not be put down by lovers of exciting fiction.
G. P. Putnam's Sons
New York London
The Untamed
By
Max Brand
A tale of the West, a story of the Wild; of three strange comrades,—Whistling Dan of the untamed soul, within whose mild eyes there lurks the baleful yellow glare of beast anger; of the mighty black stallion Satan, King of the Ranges, and the wolf devil dog, to whom their master's word is the only law,—and of the Girl.
How Jim Silent, the "long-rider" and outlaw, declared feud with Dan, how of his right-hand men one strove for the Girl, one for the horse, and one to "'get' that black devil of a dog," and their desperate efforts to achieve their ends, form but part of the stirring action.
A tale of the West, yes—but a most unusual one, touched with an almost weird poetic fancy from the very first page, when over the sandy wastes sounds the clear sweet whistling of Pan of the desert, to the very last paragraph when the reader, too, hears the cry and the call of the wild geese flying south.
G. P. Putnam's Sons
New York London
BY
MAX BRAND
AUTHOR OF "THE UNTAMED
A tale of the bitter and relentless tracking down by Anthony Woodbury—Easterner, but with the West in his soul, clubman, athlete, dare-devil,—of the man whom he believes to have shot and killed his father. From the "Wild West" show in New York to the bullet-riddled house and the lonely grave in the hills of the West, the adventurous and dangerous trail is followed doggedly,—and at the end is found not death but life and love.
G. P. PUTNAM'S SONS
NEW YORK LONDON
The Novelist
who never had
a Failure!
All other novelists, no
matter what their
fame,have slumped-
never, Dell. It is a a
perfect staircase
Up to Fame, an
astounding cres-
cendo, from
"The Way of
anEagle"up
tothisnew
one
The
Obstacle Race
14|The Obstacle Race
13|RosaMundi
12|The Top of the World
11|The Tidal Wave
10|The Lamp in the Desert
9|Greatheart
8|The Safety Curtain
7|The Hundredth Chance
6|Bars of Iron
5|The Keeper of the Door
4| The Swindler
3|The Rocks of Valpre
2|The Knave of Diamonds
1|The Way of an Eagle
New York G.P.Putnam's Sons London