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OverviewThe European Werewolf PhenomenonPredators, Panic, and the Truth Behind the Legend For centuries, Europe told stories of men who became wolves. But before there were trials, before there were confessions, before there were woodcuts of snarling creatures in the snow, there were forests. There were wolves moving along the edge of villages. There were winters that compressed predator and human into the same narrow corridors of survival. The European Werewolf Phenomenon is not a book about fantasy creatures. It is an investigative journey into the conditions that gave rise to one of Europe's most enduring legends. Beginning in France and the Alpine belt-regions once saturated with wolves-this book examines the ecological reality of medieval Europe. Wolf density. Livestock pressure. Settlement patterns at forest edge. Organized hunts and bounties. When wolves were everywhere, encounters were not rare. They were structural. From there, the investigation deepens. What happens when wolves behave outside expectation? How did rabies outbreaks distort predator behavior in ways that appeared unnatural? Could feral children and forest hermits have blurred the visual line between human and animal? Did criminals exploit predator fear to hide violence? Why do transformation testimonies repeat across France, Germany, and the Baltic regions with striking structural similarities? Layer by layer, this book separates exaggeration from pattern. Drawing on historical records, ecological research, documented rabies accounts, feral child cases, and modern wolf recovery data, The European Werewolf Phenomenon explores how myth forms when real predators live close to human settlement for generations. This is not a sensational retelling of werewolf trials. It is a disciplined examination of proximity. The wolf was not a distant creature in medieval Europe. It stood at the treeline. It adapted to human landscapes. It watched, assessed, and sometimes behaved in ways that unsettled even experienced observers. In that narrow space between biology and perception, stories accumulated. And most of them can be explained. But not all details sit flat. Repeated accounts of prolonged watchfulness. Reports of upright figures that linger too long. Descriptions that echo across borders despite different legal systems and languages. If wolves explain most of the legend, why does something still feel unresolved? As modern wolves return to parts of Europe after decades of absence, the old boundary reappears-this time under the lens of science. Population modeling replaces rumor. Wildlife policy replaces panic. Yet the emotional tension remains familiar. Because when humans share landscapes with intelligent predators, categories compress. The European Werewolf Phenomenon asks a simple but difficult question: When does a wolf stop being a wolf? Grounded in documented research and written in a measured investigative voice, this book does not chase spectacle. It follows terrain, behavior, and repetition. It explores the possibility that myths endure not because they are entirely true-but because they are not entirely false. For readers interested in European history, wolf ecology, folklore origins, and the psychological boundary between wilderness and belief, this book offers a careful and unsettling examination of one of the Old World's most persistent legends. The monster may not be real. But the wolf was. And sometimes, that is enough. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Tim HalvardPublisher: Tim Halvard Imprint: Tim Halvard Dimensions: Width: 15.20cm , Height: 1.10cm , Length: 22.90cm Weight: 0.286kg ISBN: 9781997962144ISBN 10: 1997962144 Pages: 210 Publication Date: 17 February 2026 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Available To Order We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately. Table of ContentsReviewsAuthor InformationTab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |
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