Jack London’s career started when the new printing technology enabled low-cost production of magazines, which grew the interest of the public on popular magazines aimed at a strong market for short fiction. By 1900, Jack London mad about $2,500 in writing, which is approximately $71,000 in today’s currency. Among his short stories sold to magazines were “Diable” (1902), “Batard” (1904), “To Build a Fire” (1908), and “The Call of the Wild,” which he sold to the Saturday Evening Post in early 1903 for $750, and the book rights to Macmillan for $2000. The Call of the Wild is known to be one of his most celebrated works (Wikipedia, Aug 2014). But to build a fire was known as the best of all his stories. A titled two short stories; the first was published in 1902 and the second was published in 1908, which became a collection of selected literary passages. The two versions provide an illustration of Jack London’s growth and maturation as a writer. The story recounts the careless trek of a new arrival that had ignored warnings about the risks of traveling alone in the cold. Later caught in trouble at a moment it was already late and survival only depends on his …show more content…
However, there was very harmful to his health. For example, experience with swollen gums, loss of four teeth, constant gnawing pain of the hips and leg muscles, which all were a condition caused by deficiency of ascorbic acid reminded him of his struggles in the Klondike. It was that struggle that inspired his short story, “To Build a Fire”, which was assessed as his best by many critics. ‘To Build a Fire’ like many other works of Jack London, which presented him as a valiant, wise, adventurous worker who tries to achieve his goals and never minding the