Difference between revisions of "The Wages Of Virtue"

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| colspan="2" align="center" width="175px" | [[Image:Book-Cover-HR0223-1953-P.C Wren.jpeg|175px|thumb|center|1953 US Edition]]
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| colspan="2" | '''By [[P.C. Wren]]'''
 
| colspan="2" | '''By [[P.C. Wren]]'''
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==Book Description==
 
==Book Description==
  
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This is another of P.C. Wren's stories of the strange philosophy and comradeship of the men who formed the legion of the damned. It introduces the French Foreign Legion in Algeria, and in the tradition of Beau Geste and Beau Sabreur, is a tale of dramas enacted in the desert by men whom desperation has robbed of their inherited values, substituting a strange code of comradeship. The story is vivid, intimate, and stirring. It carries the imprint of truth, and could, indeed, be written only by one who, like its author, had himself lived the life of a Legionnaire.
  
 
==Cover Variation (By Release Date)==
 
==Cover Variation (By Release Date)==
 
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| [[Image:Book-Cover-HR0223-1953-P.C Wren.jpeg|125x197px|thumb|left|1953 <br\>US Edition]]
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| [[Image:Book-Cover-HR0223The Wages Of Virtue-1953-P.C Wren.jpeg|125x197px|thumb|left|1953 <br\>US Edition]]
 
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Latest revision as of 16:47, 18 November 2012

1953 US Edition
By P.C. Wren
Publisher Harlequin Romance #223
Release Month 1953 (US)
Harlequin Romance Series #
Preceded by Mad Mike
Followed by Lady Hobo

Book Description

This is another of P.C. Wren's stories of the strange philosophy and comradeship of the men who formed the legion of the damned. It introduces the French Foreign Legion in Algeria, and in the tradition of Beau Geste and Beau Sabreur, is a tale of dramas enacted in the desert by men whom desperation has robbed of their inherited values, substituting a strange code of comradeship. The story is vivid, intimate, and stirring. It carries the imprint of truth, and could, indeed, be written only by one who, like its author, had himself lived the life of a Legionnaire.

Cover Variation (By Release Date)

1953 <br\>US Edition