Have you ever heard someone say they’re book smart or street smart? In “To Build a Fire” by Jack London, this expression can make you think what is really more important to have. Jack London’s literary styles are ones that define his stories. London’s literary techniques are shown through the conflicts, symbols, irony, and how the story is an interesting and powerful story. The story begins with a man and his one companion, a dog, is set out into the Yukon Territory to find gold. The man strays off
reality” or “verisimilitude.” In the short story To Build a Fire by Jack London, the romantic ideal that is being countered by the reality is nature. As a realist writer, Jack London shows in the short story how in reality nature does not care for people and how it can kill a man easily. To show how romanticism is portrayed in nature, two sources were chosen to prove the existence of a 19th century romantic ideal that is being debunked by the London’s realist point of view. The primary source is a poem
The struggle of man versus nature long has dwelt on the consciousness of humanity. Is man an equal to his environment? Can the elements be conquered or only endured? We constantly find ourselves facing these questions along with a myriad of other questions that cause us to think, where do we fit? These questions, crying for a response, are debated studied and portrayed in both Jack London’s “To Build a Fire” and “The Most Dangerous Game” by Richard Connell. Throughout both stories, we see the settings
socialism, mysticism, Darwinian Determinism, and Nietzsche the theories of race. Of fifty books published during his brief career The Call of the Wild is the most famous and widely read. London’s fiction particularly The Call of the Wild, The Iron Heel, The Sea Wolf, and short stories “Love of Life,” “To Build a Fire,” and “Baard” are considered Classics in American Literature. London was born in January 12 (1876) at San Francisco to Flora Wellman, abandoned by her common-law husband one year. Nine