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Book cover of The Scorn of Women by Jack London

The Scorn of Women

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Number Of Reads:

42

Language:

English

Category:

literature

Pages:

200

Quality:

good

Views:

800

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Book Description

Scene. Alaska Commercial Company's store at Dawson. It is eleven o'clock of a cold winter morning. In front, on the left, a very large wood-burning stove. Beside the stove is a woodbox filled with firewood. Farther back, on left, a door with sign on it, "Private." On right, door, a street entrance; alongside are wisp-brooms for brushing snow from moccasins. In the background a long counter running full length of room with just space at either end for ingress or egress. Large gold-scales rest upon counter. Behind counter equally long rows of shelves, broken in two places by ordinary small-paned house-windows. Windows are source of a dim, gray light. Doors, window-frames, and sashes are of rough, unstained pine boards. Shelves practically empty, with here and there upon them an article of hardware (such as pots, pans, and tea-kettles), or of dry-goods (such as pasteboard boxes and bolts of cloth). The walls of the store are of logs stuffed between with brown moss. On counter, furs, moccasins, mittens, and blankets, piled up or spread out for inspection. In front of counter many snow-shoes, picks, shovels, axes, gold-pans, axe-handles, and oblong sheet-iron Yukon stoves. The feature most notable is the absence of foodstuffs in any considerable quantity. On shelves a few tins of mushrooms, a few bottles of olives.
Author portrait of Jack London

Jack London

Jack London was born in 1876 in America, and died there in 1916. His father was a priest who practiced astrology and read the unseen and erasers. That is why Jack London is known in the literature of value and Marxism concerned with the petty-bourgeois side, working in the service of the toilers. Jack London drank the bitterness of life, worked in various jobs, marine police, miners and others, bandit, marine police, ship captain, student, reporter, miner and others. It is said that he committed suicide and died.

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This book is currently unavailable for publication. We obtained it under a Creative Commons license, but the author or publisher has not granted permission to publish it.

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