White Fany

15.00

Title: White fang

Author: Jack London

Translator: Pouria Mousavi

Publisher: Rain Rain

Subject: American story

Age category: Adult

Cover: Paperback

Number of pages: 152 p

Language Farsi

Qty:
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Description

White Fany is a novel by Jack London, an American author. The novel was first published as a footnote in the journal Outing in 1906. The story takes place during the Klondike Gold Rush. Jack London follows the life of a dog with wolf blood. In this novel, he deals with moral issues and the confrontation between savagery and human civilization. This novel complements another of Jack London’s famous novels, The Sound of the Beast. White Teeth is a work in contrast to Wild Sound, published three years ago. If there Buck, the sled domestic dog, turns into a predatory wolf, here the wild animal (three-quarters of which is a wolf and a quarter of which is a wolf dog) is domesticated and comes to the aid of man.

When Buck is a puppy, he is captured by an Indian native who serves him in exchange for food and shelter. White teeth are not yet fully domesticated, as his wolfish temperament is constantly challenged by his rival. Jack London is the first successful American working class writer. His ability to write more than a thousand words a day led him to create many famous works during his 18 years of writing. Jack London’s prolific work can be seen in the 51 books and hundreds of articles he has published. He was the most expensive and most widely read American writer of his time.

White Fany is a work in contrast to Wild Sound, published three years ago. If there Buck, the sled domestic dog, turns into a predatory wolf, here the wild animal (three-quarters of which is a wolf and a quarter of which is a wolf dog) is domesticated and comes to the aid of man.

Buck, when he is a puppy, is bought by an Indian native named Beauty Smith, who sells it for a bottle of alcohol. “Beauty Smith” kills different dogs and enjoys it and earns money. In one of these plays, he confronts a white-toothed dog in front of a bulldog, and the white-toothed man fights with his strong body, resulting in a wild temperament and a white-toothed wolf. This dog turns to human life to escape savagery and futile struggles.
Autumn is a special valley every year that the Yihat tribe pursues deer, which they never set foot in, and there are women who are very sad when they talk by the fire about the devil coming and choosing to live there. Jack of London in The Beast has tried to enter the mysterious world of a loyal dog and take his life with him for a moment.

In part of the story, we read: “The first day of Buck’s stay on the shores of Diyat was like a nightmare for him. Buck was suddenly uprooted from the heart of civilization and thrown into the heart of primitive and even pre-primitive things. This was no longer a comfortable life when he was sunbathing and had no choice but to turn around and get tired of unemployment. It was neither peace nor comfort, nor even a moment of security and safety. Whatever it was, it was movement and turmoil, and every moment that passed was a danger that passed over Buck’s life or body or others. It was necessary to always be alert to the alarm, because these dogs and these people were not urban. This book has been published by “Rain of Wisdom”.
Sentences from the text of the book

At the end of December, the gray dog ​​set out on a journey through the icy Mackenzie River with his wife Klokoch and son Mitsah. He prepared a large sledge for his and his wife to use, which was pulled by large dogs, and he prepared a smaller sledge for Mitsah and tied small dogs to it. The second sledge was more like a toy, but it was fun and great for the young Mitsah, who was just about to find a place in the world, especially since he was responsible for driving the sledge and guiding the dogs. Of course, they also put some tools and food in the same small sledge.

The wolf cub had seen the dogs tied to the sledge before, so when he tied himself to it for the first time, he did not become impatient or savage.
The double-walled collars were fastened with soft moss around the whites’ necks, and two leather straps were attached to another leather on the animal’s chest and back, with a long strap tied to the leather used to pull the sledge. The other six dogs were tied to a sledge with a wolf cub that was nine or ten months old, but the white teeth were no more than eight months old. Each dog was tied to a sledge with a separate strap attached to a ring and fitted to each dog’s body length. “The sledge was made of birch bark and the front part was made upwards so that it would not sink in the snow.”

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Additional information

نویسنده

جک لندن

Translator

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