How Many Pages Does Rules Of Prey Have?

2025-12-05 04:36:54 200

5 Answers

Vaughn
Vaughn
2025-12-06 21:27:03
My copy of 'Rules of Prey' clocks in at 339 pages, but what really stuck with me wasn't the length—it was how Sandford makes every page count. The dialogue crackles, and Davenport's quirks (like his habit of designing board games) give it such personality. I lent it to my neighbor who normally only reads true crime, and now she's binge-reading the whole Prey series. Page numbers hardly matter when a book grabs you like that.
Kyle
Kyle
2025-12-07 09:29:50
342 pages of pure tension! Sandford doesn't waste a single one either—even the quieter moments build toward that heart-pounding finale. I love how the paperback fits perfectly in my coat pocket for commute reading, though I kept missing my stop because I'd get too absorbed.
Ximena
Ximena
2025-12-07 19:39:41
I actually stumbled upon 'Rules of Prey' while browsing a used bookstore last summer, and the edition I picked up had 342 pages. It's one of those thrillers that just sinks its hooks into you—I ended up finishing it in two sittings because the pacing was so relentless. The way John Sandford crafts the cat-and-mouse game between Lucas Davenport and the killer feels so visceral, like you're right there in Minneapolis with them.

Funny thing is, I later found out that early printings sometimes vary slightly in page count due to formatting differences, but most modern editions stick to that 340–350 range. The mass-market paperback I have even includes a bonus excerpt from the next prey novel, which added a few extra pages. Definitely a series worth diving into if you love gritty crime fiction!
Georgia
Georgia
2025-12-07 21:43:02
340 pages in the version I read, but it flies by faster than a thriller has any right to. The way Sandford writes action scenes—like that alley chase in chapter 14—makes you forget you're even turning pages. Now excuse me while I hunt down the next book in the series...
Ulysses
Ulysses
2025-12-11 00:19:49
After digging through three different editions at the library (yes, I geeked out that hard), the hardcovers average 320 pages while paperbacks run longer due to smaller print. But here's the kicker: the audiobook is 11 hours, which feels way shorter because the narrator nails Davenport's sarcasm. Page counts are neat trivia, but the real magic is how Sandford turns procedural details into something addictive. My dog-eared copy proves how often I revisit it.
View All Answers
Scan code to download App

Related Books

Pages
Pages
A writer who knows every popular trope of werewolf stories. After her relationship with her boyfriend and parents fell apart, she planned to create her own stories and wished for her story to become a hit. She fell unconscious in front of her laptop in the middle of reading the novel and transmigrated into the novel's world. She becomes Aesthelia Rasc, a warrior who has an obsession with the alpha's heir, Gior Frauzon. Aesthelia refused to accept the fact that there was a relationship blooming between Gior and Merideth Reiss, the female lead. Aesthelia fought Merideth to win over Gior, until she died. Now, the writer who became Aesthelia wants to survive as much as she can until she figures out how to come back to her own world. She will do everything to avoid her fated death, for her own survival. It is hard to turn the 'PAGES' when you know what will happen next.
10
59 Chapters
98 Pages of My Former Mother-in-law's House Rules
98 Pages of My Former Mother-in-law's House Rules
Half a year after our divorce, my ex-husband became a trending topic online. His current wife, who had just given birth, jumped off a building. When she jumped, she was clutching a printed, 98-page copy of the "Cloves Family Code of Conduct." The reason for her suicide? She couldn’t buy discounted groceries online. A reporter came to interview me and asked, "Excuse me, were you also given the same family rules?"
8 Chapters
Moonlit Pages
Moonlit Pages
Between the pages of an enchanted book, the cursed werewolves have been trapped for centuries. Their fate now rests in the hands of Verena Seraphine Moon, the last descendant of a powerful witch bloodline. But when she unknowingly summons Zoren Bullet, the banished werewolf prince, to her world, their lives become intertwined in a dangerous dance of magic and romance. As the line between friend and foe blurs, they must unravel the mysteries of the cursed book before it's too late. The moon will shine upon their journey, but will it lead them to salvation or destruction?
Not enough ratings
122 Chapters
Her Prey
Her Prey
Freya Blackwood is a rouge witch. Her birth parents were killed by vampires and she was abandoned by her adoptive parents when her powers began to manifest. She has survived by bounty hunting vampires, werewolves, and other creatures of the night. Freya was the best in the business and no one got away. Until she met Kieran, a handsome and dangerous vampire who just so happens to be her next victim.
Not enough ratings
5 Chapters
FAMILY RULES (Mafia Rules #2)
FAMILY RULES (Mafia Rules #2)
~There are certain expectations when a principessa is born to the Italian Famiglia~ Valentina Gia Salvatore, Wife to Julio Salvatore, matron of the Salvatore Family. It's been two years since I was tied in the vows of holy matrimony with my husband, I vowed to be loyal to him, as my husband, and my capo, I have. What I didn't promise was to love him and now I do. With blood, sweat, and tears. I am a mother, a sister, and the wife of the Capo Dei Capi of the Italian family. I have everything I could ever want; I thought things would settle down and I would finally stop learning, but I was wrong. Note: This is part of a series and is to be read in order. if you are here after reading MAFIA RULES, welcome and enjoy the ride!
9.6
79 Chapters
Prey Of Twin Stepbrothers
Prey Of Twin Stepbrothers
Lilyanne and her mother, Olivia, escape from Lily's abusive father, Victor when her mother notices Victor’s hand reaching under Lily’s skirt. Olivia remarries Alpha Lucas, who sends Lily to Silver Moon Academy, where she hides her identity to avoid disrupting Olivia’s new life. But mainly because of her new stepbrothers who warned her not to disclose their relationship. On her 18th birthday, she discovers her mates are none other than her tormenting step brothers. They always bullied her until they discovered she's her mate. They seek her forgiveness, but a curse threatens their bond. As soon as they marked Lily as their may, they would die. The brothers and Lily must find a witch to break the curse. But what will happen when they find out that the witch they're searching for was none other than Lilyanne who would cause their death?
Not enough ratings
24 Chapters

Related Questions

What Are The Survival Rules In 'Anime Survival'?

3 Answers2025-06-12 13:26:05
The survival rules in 'Anime Survival' are brutal but brilliantly designed to keep viewers on edge. Contestants get dumped into a deadly game zone packed with traps, monsters, and rival players. Rule one: no teams allowed. You go solo or die fast. The environment shifts every 12 hours—jungles become deserts, ice fields morph into lava pits—forcing constant adaptation. Your only tool is a wristband that tracks kills and warns of danger zones. Die in the game, you die for real. The top three survivors get wishes, but here's the twist: your wish gets twisted if you reveal it beforehand. The smartest players stay silent, adapt fast, and exploit the terrain's chaos.

How Faithful Is Ellison And Joycelyn: A Love Beyond The Rules Movie?

4 Answers2025-10-17 06:35:16
Watching 'Ellison And Joycelyn: A Love Beyond The Rules' felt unexpectedly tender and faithful in the places that matter most: the chemistry between the leads and the core moral dilemma. I loved how the film kept the emotional spine of the story intact — the awkward confessions, the small everyday moments, the scenes that in the book read like internal monologue were translated into quiet looks and lingering music. That choice sacrifices a bit of the novel's inner voice, but it gives the movie real cinematic warmth. Where it drifts is in the padding and pruning. Several side plots and minor characters who gave the book texture are either condensed into composite figures or dropped entirely, and the pacing speeds up in the middle to fit a runtime. A few moral ambiguities are toned down, and the finale takes a slightly more optimistic route. Still, the adaptation feels intentional rather than lazy: it respects character arcs and the relationship's emotional logic, even if it streamlines worldbuilding. Overall, I walked out feeling satisfied — maybe a little nostalgic for the book's extra pages, but genuinely moved by what the film chose to keep and how it staged those moments.

What Causes High Prey Drive In Urban Animal Films?

5 Answers2025-10-17 14:23:18
Urban-set animal scenes always hit me differently — they feel like wildlife with an accent, tuned to human rhythms and anxieties. I notice that high prey drive in these films often comes from two overlapping worlds: real ecological change and deliberate storytelling choices. On the ecology side, cities are weirdly abundant. Lots of small mammals and birds thrive because we leave food, shelter, and microhabitats everywhere. That creates consistent prey patches for predators who are bold or clever enough to exploit them, and filmmakers borrow that logic to justify relentless chases and stalking. I find it fascinating how urban predators can be shown as opportunistic, not noble hunters — they’re grabbing whatever they can, whenever they can, and the screen amplifies that frantic energy. Then there’s the behavioral and physiological angle that I geek out on a bit. Animals that live near humans often lose some fear of people, get conditioned by handouts or leftover food, and shift their activity patterns to match human schedules. That lowers the threshold for predatory behavior in footage — a fox that normally lurks in brush might become a bold nighttime hunter in an alley. Filmmakers lean on this: tight close-ups, quick cuts, and sound design make the chase feel more urgent than it might in a field study. If a creature is shown hunting pigeons, rats, or garbage, the film is often compressing a day’s worth of clever opportunism into a two-minute heartbeat, which reads as heightened prey drive. Finally, I can’t ignore the art of storytelling. High prey drive sells suspense, danger, and sometimes a moral about humans encroaching on nature. Directors and editors heighten predatory intent through shot choice (POV shots that put us in the predator’s perspective), score (low, pulsing drones), and even animal training or CGI to exaggerate movements. Symbolically, urban predators eating city prey can represent social decay, fear of the unfamiliar, or class tensions, depending on the film’s aim. I love unpacking scenes like that because they’re a mashup of real animal behavior and human storytelling impulses — and the result often says as much about people’s anxieties as it does about foxes or hawks. It always leaves me thinking about how cities change animals and how stories change how we see them.

Which House Rules Help Adapt Novels Into RPG Campaigns?

5 Answers2025-10-17 09:26:32
If you want a novel to feel lived-in at the table, I lean into house rules that stitch story beats to player choices. I like starting with character boundaries: force players to pick roles or archetypes that match the book’s cast (thief, scholar, reluctant hero, charismatic conman), and give mechanical bonuses for leaning into those roles. That keeps parties feeling like they belong in the same fictional world and avoids shoehorning a gunslinger into a low-magic fantasy without consequences. Mechanics-wise, I often add a 'theme currency'—a small pool of tokens each player spends to pull novel-style moments: reveal a secret, gain a clue, buy a cinematic escape. Tokens regenerate when players play to their archetype or follow a theme from the source material. I also tighten or loosen magic/ability scaling so big-power scenes from 'Mistborn' or 'The Wheel of Time' land with the right epic feel: fewer trivial minions, more scene-defining confrontations. Narrative safety nets are huge for me. I write a light 'canon map' of major events and NPC motivations, mark which beats are fixed and which are malleable, and let the group vote on whether to protect a canonical detail. For pacing I use chapter-structured milestones: when the party clears a major scene, everyone hits a milestone level, which mirrors novels’ chapter progression. Small rules like limited resurrection, scripted antagonist plans, and flashback mechanics keep stakes meaningful and make the campaign feel like a living book rather than a checklist. Personally, this blend of structure and player authorship always makes sessions feel both faithful and surprising in the best ways.

How Does She Rules, They Obey End?

3 Answers2025-10-16 02:55:03
That finale kept me grinning and sighing at once. The last arc of 'She Rules, They Obey' wraps the political chess and personal growth together: the heroine finally consolidates power, but not by crushing everyone who disagrees with her. Instead, she exposes the real conspirators, forces a public reckoning, and offers a radical alternative to pure domination — a system that blends firm leadership with accountability. The climactic confrontation mixes a tense courtroom-style reveal with a physical showdown, and I loved how both intellect and heart mattered there. What warmed me most was how the formerly antagonistic men don't simply kneel because they must; they choose to follow because they're convinced by new laws and by the protagonist's willingness to change. Several supporting characters get satisfying closures: a betrayed advisor finds redemption, a rival becomes a pragmatic ally, and a shy pair of secondary characters finally get the quiet life they wanted. The epilogue skips ahead a few years to show a more stable realm — public rituals where women lead but consult widely, schools for training administrators, and small scenes of ordinary citizens benefiting from reforms. Overall, the ending balances realism and hope. It doesn't pretend the problems are gone, but it shows structures and relationships that can keep improving. I closed it smiling, thinking about the small gestures that made the whole thing feel earned.

What Are The Rules Of Forced Mate Bond With A Cursed Alpha?

5 Answers2025-10-16 09:11:18
I get utterly fascinated by the idea of a Forced Mate Bond tangled up with a cursed alpha, so here's how I would set the rules in a way that feels gritty and emotionally charged. First, the origin: the bond is a supernatural imprint—instant, biological, and magical—that clicks when two souls are identified as mates. A curse on the alpha changes the bond’s parameters: it can make the bond one-sided, amplify compulsions, or tie the mate to the curse’s condition rather than the person. Triggers matter: the bond often activates on intense proximity, life-or-death situations, or during a blood/pain exchange ritual. Consent is an ethical muddy area in this trope, so I like rules that make it clear the bond enacts physiological change but not absolute ownership—the mate feels urges and protections but retains core autonomy unless the curse overrides willpower. Other mechanics I use: the bond has physical markers (scent, a mark on skin, shared dreams), emotional resonance (echoes of the alpha’s pain), and limits (it can be suppressed temporarily with charms or herbs). Breaking or cleansing the curse usually requires confronting the source—ancestor pacts, broken oaths, or a binding object—and often needs mutual effort, not just the alpha’s sacrifice. I always leave room for messy healing; a lawless bond makes for richer character work in my view.

How Does Prey Drive Affect Protagonist Behavior In Thrillers?

3 Answers2025-10-17 17:05:07
The thrill of a chase has always hooked me, and prey drive is the secret engine under a lot of the best thrillers. I usually notice it first in the small, animal details: the way a protagonist's breathing tightens, how they watch a hallway like a den, how ordinary objects become tools or threats. That predator/prey flip colors every choice—do they stalk an antagonist to remove a threat, or do they become hunted and discover frightening resources inside themselves? In 'No Country for Old Men' the chase feeds this raw instinct, and the protagonist’s reactions reveal more about his limits and code than any exposition ever could. When writers lean into prey drive, scenes gain a tactile urgency. Sensory writing, pacing, and moral ambiguity all tilt sharper: a hunter who hesitates becomes human, a hunted character who fights dirty gets sympathy. Sometimes the protagonist's prey drive is noble—survival, protecting others—but sometimes it corrodes them into obsession, blurring lines between justice and cruelty. That tension makes me keep reading or watching, because the stakes become not just whether they survive, but whether they return whole. Personally, I love thrillers that let the animal side simmer under the civilized one; it feels honest and dangerous, and it sticks with me long after the credits roll.

What Are The Rules Of The Ancestral Wealth Inheritance System?

1 Answers2025-10-17 14:21:26
Wow, the Ancestral Wealth Inheritance System is such a gloriously chaotic plot device—I can't help but grin whenever family politics turn into treasure hunts. In my head it always runs by a strict but flavorful rulebook, so here’s the version I love to imagine: first, eligibility. Only those who are direct blood descendants or legally adopted heirs can register with their family's legacy ledger. The system demands proof: blood seals, ancestral tokens, or a sworn contract penned in the household's ink. Once registered, prospects are classified into tiers—Starter, Heir, Scion, and Patriarchal—which determine the access level to different vaults. Wealth is categorized too: mundane assets (lands, buildings), spirit assets (spirit stones, cultivation aids), and relics (bound weapons, legacy techniques). Each category has its own unlocking conditions and safeguards to stop a single greedy relative from draining everything overnight. Activation and retrieval rules are where the drama really heats up. An ancestral vault usually requires an activation ritual—often timed to a death anniversary, solstice, or the passing of a generation. Activation might trigger trials: moral tests, combat duels, or puzzles tied to family lore. Passing a trial grants inheritance points; accumulating enough points unlocks tiered rewards. There's almost always a cooldown or taxation mechanic: withdrawing major ancestral wealth attracts a lineage tax (paid to the clan council or ancestral spirit), and some treasures are cursed unless the heir upholds family precepts for a set period. Compatibility matters too—certain relics require a specific blood resonance or cultivation foundation, so a novice can't just pocket a patriarch's divine sword without consequences. If someone tries to bypass rules using forged seals or outside help, the system flags the vault and can lock it indefinitely or summon a guardian spirit to enforce penalties. Conflict resolution and longevity rules make the system great for long, messy sagas. When multiple claimants exist, the system enforces a structured process: mediation by a neutral clan, an auction of divisible assets, or sanctioned duels for single relics. Illegitimate heirs might get shadow inheritances—lesser treasures or temporary access—while true lineage can petition to merge branches and combine legacies after fulfilling unification trials. The system also supports inheritance succession: once an heir has fully claimed and settled their debts to the lineage tax, they can designate their own successor under watchful registry rules, but certain crown relics remain untransferable unless a bloodline ascends to a new tier. There are safety net clauses too, like emergency trusteeships if heirs are minors, or the Ancestral Court stepping in for corruption or extinction events. I adore how these mechanics create tension without breaking immersion: every retrieval feels earned, every family meeting becomes a possible coup, and the moral costs of claiming power are tangible. It turns inheritance into a living, breathing element of worldbuilding—ripe for betrayal, sacrifice, or cathartic victory—and I never tire of imagining all the clever ways characters try to outwit the system.
Explore and read good novels for free
Free access to a vast number of good novels on GoodNovel app. Download the books you like and read anywhere & anytime.
Read books for free on the app
SCAN CODE TO READ ON APP
DMCA.com Protection Status