Book guide
Gone Wild
Buy options
Affiliate disclosure: purchases made through links on this site may earn us a commission at no additional cost to you.
Best for readers who...
Good fit if you want...
Worth opening if you want a more concrete fit signal than lookalikes. Solid match if you want a more concrete fit signal than lookalikes. If you appreciate intimate first-person, imagery and detail are abundant, creating vivid scenes that stay with you long after you finish reading.
Maybe skip if...
Skip this if you want only very short reading sessions right now. Not the best pick if you need an entirely different pacing profile. When you prefer definitive resolutions, the viewpoint rotates often, requiring you to reorient regularly.
Summary
Gone Wild by James W. Hall looks like a backlist title with a clear setup and an easy way in from the record we have here. The edition details point to 1996 • Bantam Books • 449 pages, which helps set expectations before you buy.
Edition on file: 1996 • Bantam Books • 449 pages • ISBN 9780440217817.
Why this book now
More appealing if you want an older backlist book that still feels distinct instead of generic filler.
Reader guide
Quick details that help you decide faster.
Reading commitment
Steady Needs some room
Steady commitment. This looks like a book to live with for a while, not sample quickly.
What stands out here
This one stands out through its reading feel more than through dry edition details: Idea-led • Deep dive.
Best way to approach it
Treat this like a focused read: enough attention to get its shape, without overcomplicating it.
45-second preview
Three quick cards, fifteen seconds each.
Card 1 of 3
Ready to pick this one up?
Was this page helpful?
Quick thumbs only. No login.
Loading feedback…
Similar books on UPB
Nearby picks ranked by author, shelf fit, publisher, era, and record quality.
Recommendation cards are not ready for this book yet.
Preview links
Optional external previews if you still want to check before buying.
This looks built around a reading experience that should show its character pretty quickly once you start. Overall, it looks like a deeper read that asks for a little more time and attention. It also has the feel of a backlist title rather than a brand-new release.
Book overview built from edition details and related-book context.