Ernest Hemingway / A Moveable Feast

David Foster Wallace / Infinite Jest

Leo Tolstoy / Anna Karenina

Jack London / The Call of the Wild

JD Salinger / Catcher in the Rye

Fyodor Dostoevsky / Crime and Punishment

Charles Bukowski / Factotum

Vladimir Nabokov / Lolita

John Steinbeck / Of Mice and Men

Herman Melville / Moby Dick

Henry David Thoreau / Poems of Nature

F. Scott Fitzgerald / This Side of Paradise

Jane Austen / Pride and Prejudice

Jack Kerouac / On the Road

Charles Dickens / A Tale Of Two Cities

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Buck did not read the newspapers, or he would have known that trouble was brewing, not alone for himself, but for every tide-water dog, strong of muscle and with warm, long hair, from Puget Sound to San Diego. Because men, groping in the Arctic darkness, had found a yellow metal, and because steamship and transportation companies were booming the find, thousands of men were rushing into the Northland. These men wanted dogs, and the dogs they wanted were heavy dogs, with strong muscles by which to toil, and furry coats to protect them from the frost.

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