Rejoignez-nous pour un voyage dans le monde des livres!
Ajouter ce livre à l'électronique
Grey
Ecrivez un nouveau commentaire Default profile 50px
Grey
Abonnez-vous pour lire le livre complet ou lisez les premières pages gratuitement!
All characters reduced
The Sea-Wolf - cover

The Sea-Wolf

Jack London

Maison d'édition: BookRix

  • 0
  • 0
  • 0

Synopsis

The Sea-Wolf is a psychological adventure novel by American novelist Jack London about a literary critic, survivor of an ocean collision, who comes under the dominance of Wolf Larsen, the powerful and amoral sea captain who rescues him. 

The Sea Wolf tells the story of a soft, domesticated protagonist, in this novel's case an intellectual man named Humphrey van Weyden, forced to become tough and self-reliant by exposure to cruelty and brutality. The story starts with him aboard a San Francisco ferry, called Martinez, which collides with another ship in the fog and sinks. He is set adrift in the Bay, eventually being picked up by Wolf Larsen. Larsen is the captain of a seal-hunting schooner, the Ghost. Brutal and cynical, yet also highly intelligent and intellectual (though highly biased in his opinions, as he was self-taught), he rules over his ship and terrorizes the crew with the aid of his exceptionally great physical strength. Van Weyden adequately describes him as an individualist, hedonist, and materialist. Larsen does not believe in the immortality of the soul, he finds no meaning in his life save for survival and pleasure and has come to despise all human life and deny its value. Being interested in someone capable of intellectual disputes, he somewhat takes care of Van Weyden, whom he calls 'Hump', while forcing him to become a cabin boy, do menial work, and learn to fight to protect himself from a brutal crew.

A key event in the story is an attempted mutiny against Wolf Larsen by several members of the crew. The organizers of the mutiny are Leach and Johnson. Johnson had previously been beaten severely by Larsen, and Leach had been punched earlier while being forced to become a boat-puller, motivating the two. The first attempt is by sending Larsen overboard; however, he manages to climb back onto the ship. Searching for his assailant, he ventures into the sleeping quarters, located beneath the main deck, the only exit being a ladder. Several, at least seven men, take part in the mutiny and attack Larsen. Larsen however, demonstrating his inhuman endurance, strength, and conviction, manages to fight his way through the crew, climb the ladder with several men hanging off him, and escape relatively unharmed. Van Weyden is promoted as mate, for the original mate had been murdered. Larsen later gets his vengeance by torturing his crew, and constantly claiming that he is going to murder Leach and Johnson at his earliest convenience, being the hunting season is done, as he can't afford to lose any crew. He later allows them to be lost to the sea when they attempt to flee on a hunting boat.
Disponible depuis: 19/12/2023.
Longueur d'impression: 424 pages.

D'autres livres qui pourraient vous intéresser

  • Esme - From their pens to your ears genius in every story - cover

    Esme - From their pens to your...

    Saki Saki

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    Hector Hugh Munro, more familiarly known by his pen-name ‘Saki’ was born in what was then Akyab in British Burma on 18th December 1870. His father was an Inspector General for the Indian Imperial Police, and his mother the daughter of a Rear Admiral. 
    When he was 2 his mother died and he and his siblings were sent back to England to be raised by their grandmother and paternal maiden aunts in a strict, puritanical household near Barnstaple, Devon. Educated by governesses Saki used many of these women as character models for his later writing. 
    At 17 his father retried and returned to England and then embarked on a series of European travels with Saki and his siblings. 
    After a short stint working in Burma with the Indian Imperial Police Saki decided to move to London to make a living as a writer. Initially he wrote as a journalist for a number of newspapers and magazines before attempting an historical study, ‘The Rise of the Russian Empire’, whose real value lay in directing him to writing short stories instead, the first of which, ‘Dogged’, he published in 1899. 
    From here it was a short stab of the pen to writing political satire before in 1902 he became the foreign correspondent for The Morning Post, first in the Balkans, then Russia, Paris and back to London in 1908, where 'the agreeable life of a man of letters with a brilliant reputation awaited him.'  
    Collections of his short stories full of witty, mischievous and often macabre stories that satirized Edwardian society and two novels now appeared in the years up to the Great War.  At its’ outbreak he was 43 but managed to join as an ordinary trooper. More than once he returned to the battlefield when officially too sick or injured.  
    On 14th November 1916 Hector Hugh Munro was sheltering in crater during the Battle of the Ancre, when he was shot and killed by a German sniper. According to several sources, his last words were "Put that bloody cigarette out!"
    Voir livre
  • Herron Fisher - cover

    Herron Fisher

    Jeremiah Shipley, Wyatt Bushman

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    This audiobook is narrated by an AI Voice.   
    When you are wronged by the world, will you be broken or will you right those wrongs? Taken from his family on the Western American Frontier, Herron Fisher is forced into a decade of slavery in a Native American camp. As he continues to grow in stature and skill he fights to survive as he is threatened at every turn. 
    Herron is challenged with confronting the brutality of an outlaw-controlled land. A ruthless group, known as the Peacemakers, reign terror on the frontier.  Unable to avoid their tyranny, Herron is left to make a choice: Will he allow the persecuted to continue to be oppressed? Or will he risk everything, to do for others what they can not do for themselves?
    Voir livre
  • Things We Found When the Water Went Down - cover

    Things We Found When the Water...

    Tegan Nia Swanson

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    In this dark and ethereal debut novel, a young woman tries to make sense of strange artifacts and unsettling memories in an effort to find her mother—missing since being accused of murder 
     
     
     
    When brutish miner Hugo Mitchum is found murdered on the frozen shore of a North Country lake, the local officials and town gossips of Beau Caelais are quick to blame Marietta Abernathy, outspoken environmental activist and angry, witchy recluse. But Marietta herself has disappeared under mysterious circumstances. 
     
     
      
    Living on an isolated island with her father, Marietta's sixteen-year-old daughter, Lena, begins sifting through her mother's journals and collected oddities in an attempt to find her. While her father's grief threatens to consume him and her adoptive aunt Bea reckons with guilt and acceptance, it is the haunting town outcast Ellis Olsen who might have the most to lose if Lena fails to find her mother. 
     
     
      
    A Nordic eco-noir shot through with magical realism, Things We Found When the Water Went Down examines power, identity, and myth in a story that asks us to explore what it means to heal—or not—after violence.
    Voir livre
  • History of Herodotus The - Book 3: Thalia (Unabridged) - cover

    History of Herodotus The - Book...

    Herodotus, George Rawlinson

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    One of the masterpieces of classical literature, the "Histories" describes how a small and quarrelsome band of Greek city states united to repel the might of the Persian empire. But while this epic struggle forms the core of his work, Herodotus' natural curiosity frequently gives rise to colorful digressions - a description of the natural wonders of Egypt; an account of European lake-dwellers; and far-fetched accounts of dog-headed men and gold-digging ants. With its kaleidoscopic blend of fact and legend, the "Histories" offers a compelling Greek view of the world of the fifth century BC.
    BOOK 3: THALIA: The above-mentioned Amasis was the Egyptian king against whom Cambyses, son of Cyrus, made his expedition; and with him went an army composed of the many nations under his rule, among them being included both Ionic and Aeolic Greeks.
    Voir livre
  • Endless Love Just for You - cover

    Endless Love Just for You

    Nathan Calloway

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    Forced into an engagement since childhood, they share a home, a bed, and an unspoken attraction. One stolen kiss ignites a battle of love, jealousy, and desire. Will their rivalry turn into true romance?
    Voir livre
  • The Familiar System - cover

    The Familiar System

    Brian Dale Babiak MD

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    The body keeps the score. In the Russo family, the body keeps the script. 
    When Nell Russo dies, her wheelchair sits empty at the head of the dinner table for three weeks before anyone dares move it. Her four survivors continue their choreographed existence: Jamie swimming through air when no pool exists, Dorothy walking counterclockwise orbits until her feet bleed, Martin dismantling and rebuilding the same broken drawer seventeen times, Becca framing every moment through a camera that hasn't worked in years. 
    They call it grief. They're wrong. 
    Hidden in the attic, Becca discovers five notebooks and a hard drive—Nell's meticulous documentation of her life's work. Not raising a family, but engineering a "distributed anatomy." Each person a body part. Each movement programmed through decades of calculated reinforcement. The swimming, circling, fixing, recording: not trauma responses but systematic behavioral conditioning so precise their muscles reject any deviation like transplanted organs rejecting foreign tissue. 
    As the family excavates the architecture of their own programming, they discover something more disturbing than control—its persistence after the controller is gone. But in the ruins of Nell's design, unexpected growth appears. A tomato plant at the wrong angle. A swimming lesson where the water becomes optional. A cabinet left beautifully, deliberately broken. 
    With prose that makes you feel the phantom chlorine burning Jamie's throat and the perfect weight of teacups in Dorothy's trembling hands, THE FAMILIAR SYSTEM is a searing exploration of how families manufacture consciousness and how consciousness might, against all programming, choose to manufacture itself. This is a novel about the difference between connection and control, between growing and performing, between the family as prison and the family as ecosystem.
    Voir livre