It was Jack London who taught every voracious young reader the temperature at which Saliva will freeze in mid air. This is, without question,- cool knowledge. To many people, he is simply remembered as that guy who wrote the book about the sled dog or the short stories about gold miners. Anyone who comes to London at this surface level will be richly rewarded with that most wonderful of simple pleasures: a good read. But the author does much more than merely spin a ripping yam. Jack was no hack.
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It was so cold that his spit froze in the air before it hit the ground. He was so far above the Arctic Circle that the sun never rose. Seventy below zero, and there was nothing but whiteness in every direction: ice and snow. No trees, no houses, no wood, no warmth.
He had only a few matches and a handful of frozen fingers. And yet, to survive, he had to build a fire Jack London"s tales of adventure are unsurpassed because London was there. From Alaska to the Yukon, from the Klondike to the Arctic tundra, London knew the outlaws and the wolves, the prospectors and the grizzlies. In these collected stories of man against the wilderness, London lays claim to the title of greatest outdoor adventure writer of all time.
INTRODUCTION
To BUILD A FIRE
LOVE OF LIFE
THE CHINAG0
TOLD IN THE. DROOLING WARD
THE MEXICAN
WAR
SOUTH OF THE SLOT
THE WATER BABY
ALL GOLD CANYON
KOOLAU THE LEPER
THE APOSTATE
MAUKI
AN ODYSSEY OF THE NORTH
A PIECE OF STERK
THE STRENGTH OF.THE STRONG
THE RED ONE
THE WIT OF PORPORTUK
THE GOD OF HIS FATHERS
IN A FAR COUNTRY
TO THE MAN ON TRAIL
THE WHITE SILENCE
THE LEAGUE OF THE OLD-MEN.
THE WISDOM OF THE TRAIL
BATARD
AFTERWORD
ABOUT THE AUTHOR