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Books published by publisher Triangle books

  • CABIN FEVER.

    B. M. Bower

    Hardcover (Triangle Books, Jan. 1, 1945)
    A two year old baby boy transforms life for two hard bitten, wilderness bound gold miners.
  • Rhymes of a Rolling Stone

    Robert W SERVICE

    Hardcover (Triangle Books, March 15, 1940)
    None
  • Harriet

    Elizabeth Jenkins

    Hardcover (Triangle Books, March 15, 1943)
    None
  • Siamese Twin Mystery

    Ellery Queen

    Hardcover (Triangle Books, March 15, 1933)
    None
  • The Alaskan, a Novel of the North

    James Oliver Curwood

    (Triangle Books, July 6, 1922)
    None
  • The Murder at the Vicarage

    Agatha Christie

    Hardcover (Triangle Books, Jan. 1, 1942)
    None
  • The Good Earth

    Buck

    Hardcover (Triangle Books, Aug. 16, 1943)
    None
  • The murder of Roger Ackroyd,

    Agatha Christie

    Hardcover (Triangle Books, March 15, 1943)
    An early Hercule Poirot novel
  • The Lone Wolf

    Louis Joseph Vance

    Hardcover (Triangle Books, March 15, 1938)
    None
  • Dark horse: A story of the Flying U

    B. M Bower

    Hardcover (Triangle Books, July 6, 1943)
    Bertha Muzzy Sinclair or Sinclair-Cowan, nÊe Muzzy (November 15, 1871 – July 23, 1940), best known by her pseudonym B. M. Bower, was an American author who wrote novels, fictional short stories, and screenplays about the American Old West.Her works, featuring cowboys and cows of the Flying U Ranch in Montana, reflected "an interest in ranch life, the use of working cowboys as main characters (even in romantic plots), the occasional appearance of eastern types for the sake of contrast, a sense of western geography as simultaneously harsh and grand, and a good deal of factual attention to such matters as cattle branding and bronc busting."
  • The Yukon Trail: A Tale of the North

    William MacLeod Raine

    Hardcover (Triangle Books, Jan. 1, 1941)
    First published in 1917, The Yukon Trail: A Tale of the North (filmed as The Grip of the Yukon in 1928) is a crisply entertaining adventure / love story from the prodigious output of William MacLeod Raine (1871-1954). Raine was a British-born American novelist who wrote fictional adventure stories about the American Old West. He averaged nearly two western novels a year for some 46 years. Twenty of his novels have been filmed. Though Raine was prolific, he was a slow, careful, conscientious worker, intent on accurate detail, and considered himself a craftsman rather than an artist.
  • The Honor of the Big Snows

    James Oliver Curwood

    (Triangle Books, Jan. 1, 1941)
    Novel of the Canadian North, a story of sorrow and adventure in the frozen Northland. Originally published in 1911. Out of the night came Jan and into the lives of all those at the company post on Lac Bain, in the Canadian Northland. Jan, almost starved and frozen, enters into the lives of John Cummins and Melisse, his daughter, playing his violin for food. He stays to become a beloved member of their family and the community. But Jan has a deep mystery about his past that haunts him. When a stranger shows up at the camp, this hidden past is threatened exposure. Jan s mystery unravels as he faces life at the remote outpost during the early 1900 s, a smallpox outbreak at the camp, and his love for little Melisse. It is the Honor of the Big Snows, part of his heritage, that Jan must keep, and that leads him to leave the post searching for his honor in his past.