Tuesday, April 7, 2020
INTRODUCTION Essays (681 words) - Jack London,
  INTRODUCTION    Jack London (1876-1916) was easily the most successful and best-known writer  in America in the first decade of the 20th century. He is best known for his books, The    Call of the Wild, White Fang, and The Sea-Wolf, and a few short stories, such as To    Build a Fire and The White Silence. He was a productive writer whose fiction traveled  through three lands and their cultures such as the Yukon, California, and the South    Pacific. His most famous writings included war, boxing stories, and the life of the    Molokai lepers. "He was among the most influential people of his day, who understood  how to use the media to market his self-created image of a once poor boy to now famous  writer"(biography of Jack London). He left over fifty books of novels, stories, journalism,  and essays.    BIOGRAPHICAL INFORMATION    London was born in San Francisco to an unmarried mother, Flora Wellman. His  father may have been William Chaney, a journalist, and lawyer. Because Flora was ill,  for eight months Jack was raised by an ex-slave, Virginia Prentiss. Late in 1876, Flora  married John London, a partially disabled Civil War veteran, who adopted Jack. The  family moved around the Bay area for a while before settling in Oakland, where Jack  completed grade school.    When he was young, London worked at different hard jobs. He searched for  oysters on San Francisco Bay, served on a fish patrol, sailed the Pacific on a sealing ship,  hoboed around the country, and returned to attend high school at age 19. During that  time, he became familiar with socialism. He ran unsuccessfully several times for Mayor  of Oakland.    London's great love became agriculture, and he often said he wrote to support his    Beauty Ranch in Glen Ellen. He brought techniques observed in Japan, like terracing and  manure spreading and used them on his farm.    Troubled by physical problems, during his thirties, London developed kidney  disease. He died on November 22, 1916. Following his death, for a number of reasons a  myth developed in which he was made up to be an alcoholic womanizer who committed  suicide. But it was proved wrong. But its rumor has resulted in neglect of his books and  his popularity. His writings became translated in several dozen languages, and he  remains more widely read by other countries around the world, than in America    LITERARY INFORMATION    Because he read so much, he chose to become a writer as an escape from the  terrible life as a factory worker. He studied many famous writings and began to submit  stories, jokes, and poems but most came without success. His experiences when he was a  boy, later formed books for boys' adventure stories like The Cruise of the Dazzler (1902)  and Tales of the Fish Patrol (1905). A committed socialist, he insisted against editorial  pressures to write political essays and insert social criticism in his fiction.    Spending the winter of 1897 in the Yukon, he began publishing in the Overland    Monthly in 1899. Many were books were written during this period of his life he told  stories in The Son of the Wolf (1900), Children of the Frost (1902), Smoke Bellew  (1912). Although The Call of the Wild (1903) brought him lots of fame , many of his  short stories also became famous, like The People of the Abyss (1903), and the same for  his discussion of alcoholism in John Barleycorn (1913). London's concern for the  outcasts of society were notably written in The People of the Abyss (1903), a harrowing  portrayal of English slum life and The Road (1907). His struggle to become a writer is  recorded in his autobiographical novel, Martin Eden (1909). London's long voyage  (1907-09) across the Pacific in a small boat also created more books about the cultures he  saw. He helped break the fear that people had about leprosy.    After their marriage he followed with a book he co-wrote with Anna Strunsky,    The Kempton-Wace Letters, which said that mates should be selected for good breeding,  not love. (Bess agreed.) London's fiction and political writings express a strong  commitment to his belief individualism and socialism.    Bibliography    BIBLIOGRAPHY    "Biography of Jack London"    The Jack London collection (DL SUNSITE)    "Jack London Search Results"    BIOGRAPHY.COM.    "London, Jack"    Grolier Multimedia Encyclopedia.    CD-ROM. 1996 ed.    
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
 
 
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.