Jack's reputation of setting many of his stories in the harsh northland is overcome with the diversity of his writings in this collection of short stories.
I use a pocket pc to read e-books. When I have an open spot in my day, I quite enjoy proping my feet up near a fireplace and get a little injection of one of Jack London's tales.
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Anne (12): I think this was a really moving book, but some of the writer's opinions, I didn't quite agree with. Jack London says that we are shaped by our society, but I believe that we can change ourselves, because we have free will.
Michelle (11): It was a great book, but I didn't like the middle portion, because White Fang was all hatred, killing all the dogs he met.
John (9): The best part was when White Fang was sitting at the shore as boats came up, waiting to kill all the dogs. I think White Fang was good and bad. He would be a good guard dog. But he was bad because he tried to kill. He never let any dog retreat to save themselves.
Mom: This was really a good book, but I recommend it as a read aloud. The reading level is way above my kids heads, but they understood it in context as a read aloud. There are some very ferocious parts that I skipped as I read, because I thought them too graphic. But the book did inspire us to discuss the idea that we are shaped by our surroundings, and that we have free will to make our way. But also, we shape other's lives by our own choices -- so we are responsible before God to others.
The storyline follows a young gray cub called White Fang, who is thrown into the midst of human culture against his will. The young cub develops into a dominant wolf and experiences confrontations beyond his vivid imagination. White Fang possesses unique and distinctive qualities for a wolf which is wonderfully detailed in the characters countless struggles.
This is truly a well-written book, with more than enough excitement to keep any apathetic reader intrigued. Although an interesting and insightful look at the nature of animals, the book's beginning can be considered a toil to accomplish and perhaps even tedious for some.
Fortunately, with the introduction of mankind, the story sweeps into action as White Fang strives to fuse with society, and the domesticated animals that come along with it. White Fang's Possession changes multiple times during the novel, keeping readers enthused and captivated. Be advised however, the exhilaration reaches a climax only halfway into the book, and never achieves the high level of excitement at any point afterward.
Despite the less absorbing material in the first and last parts of the book, Jack London's timeless account of a ferocious wolf molded by the fingers of civilization is well worth the read. The emotional attachment one attains from reading the pages of White Fang is more than enough to engage readers of all types. Don't miss out on this book.
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The other stories are also powerful tales of survival (or demise) in the face of nature's harshness. I feel I am not alone in saying that I cannot recall most of the stories I had to read in school in my younger years but I distinctly recall "To Build a Fire." London's real, visceral language and description is hard to forget, as is the human pride and stupidity that characterizes the protagonist--London seems to be saying that we must respect and understand nature in order to survive and prosper. The protagonist's demise is more comical than tragic because of his lack of understanding and appreciation for the harsh realities of his environment. All of the stories bear the same general themes as the two I have mentioned. In each, man or beast is forced to battle against nature; survival is largely determined by each one's willingness or freedom to recede into primitiveness and let the blood of his ancestors rise up within his veins. Those who refuse to give in to their lowest instincts and who do not truly respect nature do not survive. I feel that London sometimes went a little overboard in "The Call of the Wild" when describing Buck's visions and instinctual memories of his ancestors among the first men, but his writing certainly remains compelling and beautiful, an important reminder to those of us today who are soft and take nature for granted that nature must be respected and that even her harshest realities are in some ways beautiful and noble, and that the law of survival applies just as much to us as it does to the beasts of the field.
Most of the people in these stories are, of course, either victims or perpetrators (or both) of one of those long painful Western exploitations of a less civilized ("less civilized") part of the world. London knows that that's what's going on, and he writes with sympathy for all concerned, and without the more self-conscious bemoaning that would be expected of a XXIst century writer. To the modern reader, then, he can sometimes seem cold-blooded, but seldom disturbingly so.
The prose is fine and spare most of the time, and never gets in the way of the tale. The places and the tales are memorable. There is not a great variety of character and setting; the eight stories together could almost be a single novel. His voyage on the Snark (which inspired these stories) clearly left him with a strong and single impression of this place and these people, and he conveys that impression skillfully along to us.
Definitely worth reading.
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If you're looking for a book to read while flying traveling for business, this would be a great one.
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Slowly we learn who Gog really is, as well as the true identity of his recurring nemesis, Magog. Gog also has a wife named Maire who shows up at intervals, driven about by her mysterious chauffuer Jules, a woman masquerading as a man. Maire specializes in taunting and torturing Gog, while at the same time filling in the details of his life he has forgotten. Many other oddball characters circulate throughout this surreal road-trip: the Bagman, Maurice, Cluckitt, Evans, and even Gog's illegitimate son. Most of these people have at least one personal obssession that consumes them, most have more than one name or identity, and most of them don't mean Gog any good, either accidently or on purpose. The book is a series of fantastical mini-adventures, real and dreamed, that offer up much religious allegory, war satire, and a lot of jolting metafictional elements, like the narrative suddenly turning into play-script, questionable historical documentation, or poetry.
I confess I got much confused the longer it all went on. This became the sort of book where I would pick it up and resume reading, not really recalling what had just gone on before. I think the effect was deliberate, so I didn't try to fight it; I just put myself in the author's hands and let Gog wander to his final destination, where, yes, the dreams slowly give way to the reality of who and where "Gog" is. Acres of religious and political metaphor packed into a repetitive fantasy behemoth, I have now discovered, do not create my favourite type of reading experience. I haven't had such a hard time with a never-ceasing, symbol-laden, fantastical quest since Moby Dick. This is an imaginative extravaganza, no doubt, but I found it very tough to keep my mind from wandering away from it all; I got to the end on automatic-pilot, accepting my own ultimate inability to get excited about all Gog's search for himself while walking a torturous dream version of British history.
"Mr. Sinclair's novel is wild, confusing, but fascinating. The author displays an explosive, overspilling talent...laughter, horror,violence, and lust are all facets of Gog's unconcluded quest-journey which may be long remembered."
I second.
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This story provides an important message to people worldwide regarding human greed and the effects on natures well being. As the human race expands, we pay less attention to our destruction of mother nature. It also can lead the reader to an insight into their own life and the ways that we destroy things without even realizing it, only to fulfull our self pleasures.
In other ways, the story is interesting because the reader follows this man's pursuit towards happiness. Both the journey and the reward get the reader involved with their own fantasy of pursuing the dream of mining for gold, unfortunately, disregarding the effects our fantasy may have on our much needed surroundings.