Through the first 5 units of the course I read some inspiring well written stories, But I'm still impressed by that piece of art Jack London wrote. (To Build A Fire) is a kind of stories you cannot forget. Nice structured with a lot of mystery and meanings inside it. The author was talking about a man who decided to travel through Alaska, in a place called Yukon River. At that time of year, the weather temperature is about 75 below zero degree. It's completely unable to survive in that circumstances, that's what an old man from California was keep saying to him but he never listen to him. He'd already made his mind to travel with his dog in that freezing weather. He was planning to meet some fellows in a camp on the other side of the place. His hands started to freeze, he couldn't feel his numbed face and legs.He tried to make a fire but his frozen hands didn't help him. Then he released himself to death!. Even though that poor man's been died at the end, but I liked the kind of mystery in the story, The author was creative in each section, so you'll not feel boring …show more content…
This man did not know cold. Possibly none of his ancestors had known cold, real cold. But the dog knew and all of its family knew. And it knew that it was not good to walk outside in such fearful cold. It was the time to lie in a hole in the snow and to wait for this awful cold to stop. There was no real bond between the dog and the man. The one was the slave of the other. The dog made no effort to indicate its fears to the man. It was not concerned with the well-being of the man. It was for its own sake that it looked toward the fire. But the man whistled, and spoke to it with the sound of the whip in his voice. So the dog started walking close to the man’s heels and followed him along the trail."(London,1902,