The Call of the Wild
Buck lives a content life. Half St. Bernard, half Shepard, he is top dog on a California ranch. But the Gold Rush in the Klondike has produced an enormous demand for sled dogs so, when a Gardner at the ranch needs to pay a gambling debt, stealing and selling Buck is a quick way to do it.
Having never been mistreated, Buck soon learns that man can be the cruelest animal. He...more
Having never been mistreated, Buck soon learns that man can be the cruelest animal. He...more
Audio CD, 0 pages
Published
August 1st 2003
by Tantor Media
(first published 1903)
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REVIEW ADVISORY:
Please be aware that, while the following review contains a number of adorable animals pics, young Ricky Schroder, who starred in the movie version of the novel, will NOT appear...I feared that would raise the sugar content of this report to diabetically dangerous levels.
Awwwwwww.....the classic “coming of age” story, with the nifty twister of having the main character be a pawky puppy going on doggiehood. I reallylicked it liked it, so two paws up there.
BTW, I'm not going to...more
Please be aware that, while the following review contains a number of adorable animals pics, young Ricky Schroder, who starred in the movie version of the novel, will NOT appear...I feared that would raise the sugar content of this report to diabetically dangerous levels.
Awwwwwww.....the classic “coming of age” story, with the nifty twister of having the main character be a pawky puppy going on doggiehood. I really
BTW, I'm not going to...more
i am a dog obsessive. i'm nuts. dogs are my moby dick. they're my opera-house in the jungle. if i had a genie in a bottle, i'd wish away all human life (including my own) so dogs could take over the world. wait. that'd be wish number two. number one would be that i had an olympic sized swimming pool filled with dogs and i could do a few laps. then i'd erase humanity. seriously. my dog is the coolest guy i've ever met, my best friend, and love of my life. if it sounds weird: piss off. i don't wan...more
A poignant and triumphant tale of a great creature in the wild. He feels the bitterness and savagery of men and his pack, there has been a dividing line in his relations with humans by no fault but their own due to their constant usage of this canine Buck in work, in pulling in the snow, they have not shown any kindness, but there is hope he will soon be blessed with some.
One man shows a kindness that helps Buck, who has had a life of toil and enduring of hardships, its a warming to the heart to...more
One man shows a kindness that helps Buck, who has had a life of toil and enduring of hardships, its a warming to the heart to...more
Jul 02, 2009
Valerie
rated it
2 of 5 stars
·
review of another edition
Shelves:
male-protagonist,
classic
First off I should say that London is a great writer. This is the first book I've read of his. His description of the Alaskan terrain is incredible. I have never been to Alaska but when I read this book I could picture it in my head very clearly.
However, that does not take away what I think of the story itself. It wasn't bad. It was interesting, but I could not seem to grasp exactly what London's point was. Was it animal cruelty? Was it the wild should be kept wild? Or is there some hidden soci...more
However, that does not take away what I think of the story itself. It wasn't bad. It was interesting, but I could not seem to grasp exactly what London's point was. Was it animal cruelty? Was it the wild should be kept wild? Or is there some hidden soci...more
Apr 12, 2008
Scoobs
rated it
5 of 5 stars
·
review of another edition
Recommended to Scoobs by:
Juliet Echo Whisky
Buck did not read the newspapers...
of course he didn't. he was too busy being a badass. chasing down a big ass moose. saving john thornton's life. killing the indians who killed john thornton. running with the other wolves. winning bets. bitch slapping other dogs who got out of line.
buck's first snow experience...
"At the first step upon the cold surface, Buck's feet sank into a white mushy something very like mud. He sprang back with a snort. More of this white stuff was falling through the air...more
of course he didn't. he was too busy being a badass. chasing down a big ass moose. saving john thornton's life. killing the indians who killed john thornton. running with the other wolves. winning bets. bitch slapping other dogs who got out of line.
buck's first snow experience...
"At the first step upon the cold surface, Buck's feet sank into a white mushy something very like mud. He sprang back with a snort. More of this white stuff was falling through the air...more
Campfire Comics has done a fine job with this adaptation of the Jack London novel. My focus here is on the graphic novel and not to give my thoughts on Jack London’s fine work. The story’s “wordsmith” is Lloyd S. Wagner with a strong illustration job by Sachin Nagar. I enjoyed all the information they crammed into the graphic novel including the biography on Jack London on page 3. I continue to be educated and entertained by Campfire Comics and I love it. Here is a synopsis of the story:
“Buck is...more
“Buck is...more
This review has been hidden because it contains spoilers. To view it,
click here.
This book started with the life of Buck, who is a dog that lived in Santa Clara Valley. He lived with his family and lived a life of luxury. One day Manuel who helped around the house captured him. He was taken away from his owner and beaten by his next owner. Buck switched owners many times as he was sold over and over again. Eventually Buck was noticed for his strength and became a sled dog. He loved being put in the harness and taking loads to many different places. A couple of the most memor...more
I found The Call of the Wild to be a pretty enjoyable quick read, though I didn't really find a lot of deeper significance to it. It is a straightforward tale of a dog who gradually returns to a wilder state after being forced from a content life in the civilized world. Along the way there are adventures and scrapes with various humans and animals which make the story interesting, as is the transformation of the main character.
This book is told from the point of view of the dog, Buck. Having ani...more
This book is told from the point of view of the dog, Buck. Having ani...more
Mark McConnell
Mrs. Ebarvia
World Lit
10/21/08
Online Book Review
The novel I chose to read was The Call of the Wild written by Jack London. Other famous books by Jack London include White Fang, The Sea Wolf, and The Scarlet Plague. The Call of the Wild is about a dog named Buck who has an trouble-free life living on an estate in San Diego. However, Buck gets captured and sold as a sled dog to gold hunters. Buck is new to the sled dog life, and he must learn about it quickly if he wants to survive....more
Mrs. Ebarvia
World Lit
10/21/08
Online Book Review
The novel I chose to read was The Call of the Wild written by Jack London. Other famous books by Jack London include White Fang, The Sea Wolf, and The Scarlet Plague. The Call of the Wild is about a dog named Buck who has an trouble-free life living on an estate in San Diego. However, Buck gets captured and sold as a sled dog to gold hunters. Buck is new to the sled dog life, and he must learn about it quickly if he wants to survive....more
What if you were torn away from your home, your life, your family, and everything that was ever familiar to you, and got thrown into harsh, life threatening situations? In Jack London’s book “Call of the Wild”, it shows that anyone or thing can be taken from its surroundings and thrown into a world where it has to learn to survive. Buck, a domestic dog from Santa Clara Valley is forced into the Yukon because of mans need for money, gold and sled dogs . His life starts to change in a hurry and he...more
I read this book to a 92 year old woman who was dying and loved dogs. She was caring for a shaggy little white one with three legs. Needless to say, I was not prepared for all the violence and phrases like 'the dead twig', 'the dying moon'. Her fragile fingers were holding onto her blankets for dear life. This book was a rough ride. And even though I had a revelation where I said 'oh my god, I'm buck' and excused myself to the restroom so I didn't cry in front of my dying friend, the rumors that...more
I thoroughly enjoyed the story of Buck, part Saint Bernard and part Shephard who got to know first hand the best and worst of men in the harsh and unforgiving Klondike.
Poignant and beautifully written. It really was a joy to read. Time well spent.
Savage, compelling, manipulative, simple, poetic...These adjectives all apply, but they do not save the book from its negative traits. Jack London was a natural storyteller, but he was also a racist and a sexist. I thought it was my imagination at first, but after some research I realize that those accusations are common. I mention this fact because it distracted me from the story.
The imagery is rich, the spirituality moving, and by the end, I was completely enthralled by Buck's adventures. It'...more
The imagery is rich, the spirituality moving, and by the end, I was completely enthralled by Buck's adventures. It'...more
Mar 14, 2009
S. Walden
rated it
5 of 5 stars
·
review of another edition
Shelves:
engl-7701,
brought-on-the-tears
I was inspired to read The Call of the Wild after a friend raved about it. When I picked it up, I knew to expect a story that focused on the adventures of a dog based on the cover art. The dog appears strong and determined, and I wondered from whose perspective the story would be told. I have to admit that I was a bit apprehensive as to whether or not I would enjoy this story because I do not normally read adventure/nature texts, especially those texts that do not feature heroines.
I was pleasan...more
I was pleasan...more
Read and listened to this book as part of my attempt to read/reread the classics. Good book, written from a dogs point of view. Book is about a dog who is kidnapped and taken to Alaska to become a sled dog. The dog has quite a few adventures. Not written as a kids book but more of a travel/adventure book. Jack London tells a great story and obviously knows dogs. I also liked the end of the book. I also have white fang (also part of the promotion talked about below) and will listen to this next....more
This review has been hidden because it contains spoilers. To view it,
click here.
The Call Of The Wild by Jack London explains the life of Buck (judge millers dog). Buck had always been thought of as a king. Then one day Buck got kidnapped by very greedy man named Manuel who was Judge Millers Gardner. Manuel sold Buck to a few men who abused him, then those men had sold Buck to a few men named Perrault and François who were French Canadian dog-settlers and they were in the Klondike gold rush. These men were using Buck and few other dogs as sled dogs. Once Perrault and Françoi...more
The Call Of The Wild is a great book for you and your kids! It is an exciting and easy read. The book is about a courageous dog named Buck. He lives with a careing and loveing family in Santa Clara Vally California. Little did he know he was soon to be taken from his family and brought to the most extreme conditions of Yukon to be a sledge dog. Forced by survival he must follow his instics and become the most feird creatur around. During the adventure Buck learns how to hunt and survive, he goes...more
This book is a hilarious combination of the harsh wilderness and cowardice that comes form the loyalty of Buck to John Thornton. With the law of club and fang, Buck discovers the reality of life and faces every level of difficulty. Cruelty of Buck’s owners teaches him a life lesson which we can name as a transformative experience. And this life lesson changes not only Buck’s character but also his life style. While he was enjoying his life to the full, he met with the primitive side of life in t...more
This book was a very inspiring book to me because i think the lesson to be learned is to never give up. this dog, named buck, was taken into the wild when he was domesticated in the Santa Clara Valley. so he never gave up on trying to get free and this nice man, Thornton, took him is as his own.
There was only one flaw and it was at some parts they used too much vocabulary for me to even understand it. one of a few of these problems is on page 104, "..three active of precieving, determening and r...more
There was only one flaw and it was at some parts they used too much vocabulary for me to even understand it. one of a few of these problems is on page 104, "..three active of precieving, determening and r...more
Jack London's letters about the publication of "The Call of the Wild" reveal an all-too-common story that would make any author and most sympathetic readers cringe. In 1903, Jack London was hard up for cash and had just completed the manuscript. He sold the serial rights to the Saturday Evening Post for $700 and, since the editors were not all that keen on his first choice, suggested the title "The Sleeping Wolf." (Interestingly enough,
DMW3 code reader
the magazine version did not even include...more
In his classic The Call of the Wild, Jack London captures the exhilarating and dangerous era of the Yukon gold rush of the 1890s through the eyes of a dog sold into a sledding team. All the characters, both human and canine, test their strength and endurance to survive harsh winter conditions, each contending with its fellows by constantly jockeying for status, food rations and protection from enemies. Not all survive, but all are certainly changed through the process. Buck, the protagonist, bec...more
Beautifully told, you just have to know what happens to Buck!
What a brilliant classic by Jack London where the main hero is a dog by the name of Buck! Who doesn't love classics or dogs? I felt that on a miniscule scale, I could relate to Buck in his departure from the comfortable life to follow the calling of the wild, even if he didn't fully understand it.
The Call of the Wild by Jack London was so good, so addictive, that I was thrilled to stand in long lines at the film festival and slightly u...more
What a brilliant classic by Jack London where the main hero is a dog by the name of Buck! Who doesn't love classics or dogs? I felt that on a miniscule scale, I could relate to Buck in his departure from the comfortable life to follow the calling of the wild, even if he didn't fully understand it.
The Call of the Wild by Jack London was so good, so addictive, that I was thrilled to stand in long lines at the film festival and slightly u...more
IL VALORE DELLA LIBERTÀ
Nonostante l’ambientazione sia principalmente all’aria aperta, questo romanzo è una discesa agli inferi, è un capostipite del genere ‘carcerario’: perché Buck viene strappato alla sua vita di cane domestico, fatta di ozio riposo coccole e sicurezza, e sbattuto in un attimo in un mondo di cattività, violenza, repressione, prevaricazione – da un’esistenza protetta, da pari a pari, scagliato nell’inferno dove domina la legge del più forte – dal sole della California ai ghiacc...more
Nonostante l’ambientazione sia principalmente all’aria aperta, questo romanzo è una discesa agli inferi, è un capostipite del genere ‘carcerario’: perché Buck viene strappato alla sua vita di cane domestico, fatta di ozio riposo coccole e sicurezza, e sbattuto in un attimo in un mondo di cattività, violenza, repressione, prevaricazione – da un’esistenza protetta, da pari a pari, scagliato nell’inferno dove domina la legge del più forte – dal sole della California ai ghiacc...more
Kidnapped! Taken from his home in the sunny Santa Clara Valley, Buck, a St. Bernard dog, is brought to the cold, snowy lands of the North. Men have just found gold in Klondike Canada, and desperately need sled dogs as means of transportation. They will get these dogs by anyway possible, even if it means kidnapping them. Immediately, Buck’s simple and easy lifestyle is torn away from him, and he is forced to face struggle, hardship, and the constant fight for survival. Once he arrives in the icy...more
| topics | posts | views | last activity | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| I need to pick it up for a re-read | 14 | 86 | Apr 22, 2013 02:06am | |
| What started your thirst for books ? | 98 | 271 | Apr 21, 2013 10:30pm | |
| I want to know your opinion on the best thing and the worst thing about call of the wild. | 11 | 73 | Apr 18, 2013 09:45pm | |
| SPSV Mrs. Rodgers...: Kyle Deleon | 1 | 3 | Mar 03, 2013 07:26pm | |
| Aiossa's Senior 5...: derrick schoeps | 1 | 3 | Feb 06, 2013 03:50pm |
Jack London was an American novelist and short-story writer whose works deal romantically with elemental struggles for survival. At his peak, he was the highest paid and the most popular of all living writers. Because of early financial difficulties, he was largely self educated past grammar school.
London draws heavily on his life experiences in his writing. He spent time in the Klondike during th...more
More about Jack London...
London draws heavily on his life experiences in his writing. He spent time in the Klondike during th...more
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“He was mastered by the sheer surging of life, the tidal wave of being, the perfect joy of each separate muscle, joint, and sinew in that it was everything that was not death, that it was aglow and rampant, expressing itself in movement, flying exultantly under the stars.”
—
913 people liked it
“There is an ecstasy that marks the summit of life, and beyond which life cannot rise. And such is the paradox of living, this ecstasy comes when one is most alive, and it comes as a complete forgetfulness that one is alive.
This ecstasy, this forgetfulness of living, comes to the artist, caught up and out of himself in a sheet of flame; it comes to the soldier, war-mad in a stricken field and refusing quarter; and it came to Buck, leading the pack, sounding the old wolf-cry, straining after the food that was alive and that fled swiftly before him through the moonlight.”
—
111 people liked it
More quotes…
This ecstasy, this forgetfulness of living, comes to the artist, caught up and out of himself in a sheet of flame; it comes to the soldier, war-mad in a stricken field and refusing quarter; and it came to Buck, leading the pack, sounding the old wolf-cry, straining after the food that was alive and that fled swiftly before him through the moonlight.”










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