A Daughter of the Snows
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Claims to first edition, but probably circa 1910 reprint |
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Author | Jack London |
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Illustrator | Frederick C. Yohn |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Genre(s) | Novel |
Publisher | J. B. Lippincott Company |
Released | October 1902 |
Media type | Print (Hardcover) |
Pages | 334 pp |
ISBN | NA |
A Daughter of the Snows (1902), Jack London's first novel, is little read today. It is, however, notable for its heroine, Frona Welse (whose name echoes that of his mother, Flora Wellman). Frona is a strong and self-reliant woman, one of many who would people his fiction.
It is also notable for a racist sensibility which is also detectable in some of his other work. A character says: "We are a race of doers and fighters, of globe-encirclers and zone-conquerors... All that the other races are not, the Anglo-Saxon, or Teuton if you please, is." Such sentiments were common currency in Jack London's time and he places them in the mouths of characters, not the narrator.
[edit] External links
- A Daughter of the Snows, available at Project Gutenberg.