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Dark Connection

The White Wolf : 1

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In this short, White Wolf has just gotten word that the child he has hunted for fifteen years may be near him -- The Girl with the Scar.

5 pages, Kindle Edition

First published August 23, 2013

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About the author

William Stadler

30 books31 followers
From the small town of Reidsville, North Carolina, William Stadler enjoys writing novels, specifically in the epic fantasy genre where heroes and villains come to life.

His teachers and his schoolmates pushed him to explore his creativity, and twelve years later, The Pioneers Saga was created.

William Stadler wears a lot of hats. He’s a husband first, a father second, and a writer third. He currently lives in Raleigh, North Carolina where he has begun works on his next trilogy saga.

If you would like to follow William Stadler, you can find him on twitter (@William_Stadler). He also writes a weekly blog, teaching aspiring authors how to develop their writing skills (www.wstadler.com).

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Displaying 1 of 1 review
Profile Image for J.
4,068 reviews35 followers
August 7, 2024
First of all I would just like to so obviously point out that the wolf on the cover isn't white, which based on the important white wolf fur the protagonist wears and the bleached fur at the end makes it so much a contrast.

Otherwise The White Wolf is not so much a short story as it is an episode leading up to the events in the author's main book The Girl with the Scar. As a result the reader only gets to briefly know the White Wolf, that he learns about some information that may or may not lead him to the finishing of his years-long quest (past that why is a mystery) and that he can shift into the creature that may have been the embodiment of the fur that he wears by the end of the telling.

Since I haven't read the original book I cannot say whether this book really adds anything to the saga or whereas it is just a bit more promotional fluff. Since of the vagueness that it entails, it doesn't really encourage me to go out to buy a copy of the book but if I should come across the main part of the saga I also wouldn't be against reading it to get some of the answers that are so clearly lacking in this prequel.

If you are looking for a quick short and don't mind a vague book it may do for a pinch but otherwise it probably would be much better off for readers who are actually going to read the saga.
Displaying 1 of 1 review