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The Call of the Wild, White Fang, and Other Stories
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The biting cold and the aching silence of the far North become an unforgettable backdrop for Jack London's vivid, rousing, superbly realistic wilderness adventure stories featuring the author's unique knowledge of the Yukon and the behavior of humans and animals facing nature at its cruelest.
- Published: 8 July 1994
- ISBN: 9780141909981
- Imprint: Penguin eBooks
- Format: EBook
- Pages: 416
Other books in the series
The New Penguin Book Of American Short Stories, From Washington Irving To Lydia Davis
Edgar Allan Poe And Edith Wharton And Ernest Hemingway And Lydia Davis And Mark Twain And Washington Irving
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Mikhail Bulgakov
A Dog's Heart
Mikhail Bulgakov
The Man Who Was Thursday
G. K. Chesterton
On the Origin of Species
Charles Darwin
The Voyage of the Beagle
Charles Darwin
The Black Tulip
Alexandre Dumas
The Lady of the Camellias
Alexandre Dumas fils
Faust, Part I
Goethe
Faust, Part II
Goethe
Selected Poetry
Goethe Johann Wolfgang Von
Volpone and Other Plays
Ben Jonson
Species of Spaces and Other Pieces
Georges Perec
Venus in Furs
Leopold von Sacher-Masoch
Man and Superman
George Bernard Shaw
Botchan
Natsume Soseki
Military Dispatches
The Duke Of Wellington
The Prelude
William Wordsworth
About the author
Jack London was born into poverty in San Francisco in 1876. Before his success as a novelist, London spent a lot of time avoiding a life as a manual worker and, in the process, experienced many things that became central to his plots. He ran away from home, bought a sailing boat and became an oyster pirate - a story recounted in John Barleycorn. His best-known novel, The Call of the Wild, was drawn from his own experience of the Klondike Gold Rush, a time that would inspire many of London's short stories as well. London became addicted to writing after winning a short story competition in the San Francisco Morning Call in 1893. It earned London $25, the equivalent of a month's wages. Dozens of books followed - including John Barleycorn (1913), The Call of the Wild (1903) and White Fang (1906). He published an average of three or four books a year. He died in 1916.