The Cruise of the Snark

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The Floating Press, 1. 2. 2011. - 221 страница
Writer Jack London lived a life that paralleled the amazing exploits of the action-adventure heroes in his novels. The Cruise of the Snark is an engaging travelogue that details a South Pacific sea voyage that London took in 1907 in a vessel known as the Snark.
 

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Chapter I Foreword
5
Chapter II The Inconceivable and Monstrous
19
Chapter III Adventure
39
Chapter IV Finding Ones Way About
51
Chapter V The First Landfall
65
Chapter VI A Royal Sport
75
Chapter VII The Lepers of Molokai
90
Chapter VIII The House of the Sun
109
Chapter XI The Nature Man
168
Chapter XII The High Seat of Abundance
187
Chapter XIII The StoneFishing of Bora Bora
209
Chapter XIV The Amateur Navigator
219
Chapter XV Cruising in the Solomons
242
Chapter XVI Beche de Mer English
268
Chapter XVII The Amateur MD
278
Back Word
303

Chapter IX A Pacific Traverse
127
Chapter X Typee
149

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О аутору (2011)

One of the pioneers of 20th century American literature, Jack London specialized in tales of adventure inspired by his own experiences. London was born in San Francisco in 1876. At 14, he quit school and became an "oyster pirate," robbing oyster beds to sell his booty to the bars and restaurants in Oakland. Later, he turned on his pirate associates and joined the local Fish Patrol, resulting in some hair-raising waterfront battles. Other youthful activities included sailing on a seal-hunting ship, traveling the United States as a railroad tramp, a jail term for vagrancy and a hazardous winter in the Klondike during the 1897 gold rush. Those experiences converted him to socialism, as he educated himself through prolific reading and began to write fiction. After a struggling apprenticeship, London hit literary paydirt by combining memories of his adventures with Darwinian and Spencerian evolutionary theory, the Nietzchean concept of the "superman" and a Kipling-influenced narrative style. "The Son of the Wolf"(1900) was his first popular success, followed by 'The Call of the Wild" (1903), "The Sea-Wolf" (1904) and "White Fang" (1906). He also wrote nonfiction, including reportage of the Russo-Japanese War and Mexican revolution, as well as "The Cruise of the Snark" (1911), an account of an eventful South Pacific sea voyage with his wife, Charmian, and a rather motley crew. London's body broke down prematurely from his rugged lifestyle and hard drinking, and he died of uremic poisoning - possibly helped along by a morphine overdose - at his California ranch in 1916. Though his massive output is uneven, his best works - particularly "The Call of the Wild" and "White Fang" - have endured because of their rich subject matter and vigorous prose.

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