As a young man in the summer of 1897, Jack London joined the Klondike gold rush. From that seminal experience emerged these gripping, inimitable wilderness tales, which have endured as some of London's best and most defining work. With remarkable insight and unflinching realism, London describes the punishing adversity that awaited men in the brutal, frozen expanses of the Yukon, and the extreme tactics these adventurers and travelers adopted to survive.
The God of His Fathers
The Great Interrogation
Which Make Men Remember
Siwash
The Man with The Gash
Jan, The Unrepentant
Grit of Women
Where The Trail Forks
A Daughter of the Aurora
At The Rainbow's End
The Scorn of Women