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London, Jack |
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London, Jack (John Griffith Chaney) (1876–1916)US novelist. He was a prolific author of naturalistic novels, adventure stories, and socialist reportage. His works, which are often based on his own life, typically concern the human struggle for survival against extreme natural forces, as dramatized in such novels as The Call of the Wild (1903), The Sea Wolf (1904), and White Fang (1906). By 1906 he was the most widely read writer in the USA and had been translated into 68 languages.
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| Compared to Jack London, master of the primeval tale, James Dickey, the author of Deliverance, is even more primitive, if that is possible. The chapter on Jack London is Eperjesi's most satisfying. Phelan enjoyed hosting a stream of writers, poets, artists, and actors, including Jack London, Douglas Fairbanks and Edwin Markham, and over the years the house and its extensive grounds in Saratoga became a focus for artistic, intellectual and political life. |
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