Jack London’s beloved 1903 masterpiece, The Call of the Wild, is unsurpassed as the gripping adventure of Buck, a California wolf-dog enjoying the good life who is brutally kidnapped and sold into the Canadian Yukon as a sled-dog during the gold rush of the 1890s. Buck quickly has to shed his civilized ways to survive the harsh new laws of fang and club, but after terrifying challenges he triumphs by discovering his true nature, which leads him to authentic love and finally an authentic life. Far more than a deeply moving animal fable, London’s harrowing and sublime tale probes fundamental questions of human existence and our relationship to the natural world.
Includes London’s haunting short story “To Build a Fire, ” his 1903 article “How I Became a Socialist, ” his 1910 essay The Other Animals, an afterword by Ulrich Baer, and a biographical timeline.
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CONTENTS
The Call of the Wild . 1
To Build a Fire. 87
How I Became a Socialist . 105
The Other Animals . 110
Afterword by Ulrich Baer . 127
Biographical Timeline. 140
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Ulrich Baer holds a BA from Harvard and a Ph D from Yale. He is University Professor at New York University, where he teaches literature and photography. He has been awarded Guggenheim, Getty, and Alexander von Humboldt fellowships. A widely recognized expert on poetry and translator, among his books are Rainer Maria Rilke’s The Dark Interval: Letters on Loss, Grief, and Transformation, Letters on Life, and Letters to a Young Poet. Other books include Spectral Evidence, What Snowflakes Get Right, and in the Warbler Press Contemplations series: Nietzsche on Love, Dickinson on Love, and Rilke on Love. He lives in New York City.