Grey Owl had a fraught relationship with the London publisher of
The Men of the Last Frontier, Country Life, and eventually decided to take his future writing to the newly formed publishing house
Lovat Dickson & Thompson Limited. Country Life initially wanted to buy
The Men of the Last Frontier outright and offered Grey Owl $750 for all rights. Although he was inexperienced in the publishing business, Grey Owl was suspicious of a deal that gave him no royalties and turned to the Canadian Department of the Interior for advice. The free-lance writer
Lloyd Roberts happened to hear of this and intervened on Grey Owl's behalf to negotiate a fairer contract for the book. Grey Owl wanted the title of the book to be
The Vanishing Frontier, but, to his chagrin, Country Life, changed the title to
The Men of the Last Frontier without consulting him. He complained to the publisher: Grey Owl was also adamant that the book be published without editorial changes, in particular, that all grammatical mistakes be left in place. The editors at Country Life ignored his wish, much to Grey Owl's irritation. == Illustrations and photos ==