Werewolves - Treatment in books
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Lycanthropy

Treatment in books

(far from complete, I know...)

1927 Steppenwolf

Hesse, Hermann (1877-1962), German-born Swiss novelist and poet, winner of the Nobel Prize for literature in 1946. After World War II ended in 1945, his work became popular with younger readers, who identified with the central theme of many of his novels: the conflicts of youth—and especially of creative artists—in search of self.

Steppenwolf (1927; trans. 1929) is perhaps Hesse's most innovative novel. The artist-hero's double nature—human and wolfish—forces him into a labyrinth of nightmarish experiences; the work thus symbolizes the split between rebellious individuality and bourgeois convention

Other Books

  • 19 ?? The Werewolf Delusion by Ian Woodward
  • 1989 Cycle of the Werewolf by Stephen King, filmed as Silver Bullet
  • 1995 Werewolf Storytellers Handbook (Werewolf) by Clyde Caldwell (Illustrator)
  • 1998 Hengeyokai : Shapeshifters of the East (Werewolf, the Apocalypse) by Heather Curatola, Harry Heckel, Kathy Ryan
  • 1998 Vampire and Werewolf Stories (The Story Library Series) by Alan Durant (Compiler), Nick Hardcastle (Illustrator)
  • 1998 Book of Wyrm by Ron Spencer
  • 1999 The Werewolf Book : The Encyclopedia of Shape-Shifting Beings by Brad Steiger, Franklin Ruehl
  • 2000 Werewolf : The Apocalypse by Brian Campbell, Deirdre Brooks, Steve Prescott
  • 2001 Book of the Wyld by White Wolf (Editor), Richard Dansky, Drew Tucker (Illustrator), Lisa Fleishman

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sources: Microsoft® Encarta® Online Encyclopedia 2001 http://encarta.msn.com © 1997-2000 Microsoft Corporation. All Rights Reserved & Amazon.com

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