Jack London: A Study of the Short FictionThis study examines the works of this naturalist writer, best known for The Call of the Wild. Producer of nearly 200 short stories, his writing ranged in topic from the Gold Rush to science fiction. |
Contents
Stories of Social Realism | 67 |
Fictional Experimentation | 94 |
The Pacific | 126 |
Copyright | |
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adventure Ah Chun allusions American Bassett beauty Build a Fire California called characters Charley Charmian cited in text cultural death don's Earle Labor eyes face father Glen Ellen gold Goliah Greek haole Hawaii Hawaiian Hereafter cited hero Homer House of Pride human imagination Indian island Jack London Joe Garland Jung Jung's justice kama aina killed Klondike stories Koolau Lakana Leper Letters literary Literary Realism live London wrote look Macmillan magazine Malemute Kid man's Martin Eden Mauki McClintock Molokai Moreland mother narrator native naturalist nature never Northland Odyssey Old Sol Pacific protagonist published race racial ranch reader Sea-Wolf Short Fiction short stories Smoke Bellew Snark social socialist South Seas story's sun-dogs survival tale Tarwater tells terrible theme things tion trail University Unparalleled Invasion Water Baby White Silence Wolf woman women writing young