
La Llamada de lo Salvaje
3.92
474,521 valoraciones·18,328 reseñas
Publicada por primera vez en 1903, La Llamada de lo Salvaje es considerada la obra maestra de Jack London. Basada en las experiencias de London como buscador de oro en la naturaleza canadiense y sus ideas sobre la naturaleza y la lucha por la existencia, La Llamada de lo Salvaje es un relato sobre e...
- páginas
- 172
- Format
- Mass Market Paperback
- Publicado
- 2001-01-01
- Editorial
- Scholastic
Sobre el autor

Jack London
743 libros · 0 seguidores
John Griffith Chaney, better known asJack London, was an American novelist, journalist and activist. A pioneer of commercial fiction and American magazines, he was one of the first American authors to become an international celebrity and earn a large fortune from writing. He was also an innovator in the genre that wou...
A los lectores también les gustó

Harry Potter y la Piedra Filosofal (Harry Potter #1)
J.K. Rowling

Manifiesto de la Adicción: Un Camino Hacia la Recuperación
Jerry Weaver

La Danza Ancestral (Revolución de la Sabiduría, #2)
Misba

La Gran Subasta (Revolución de la Sabiduría, #1)
Misba

Lo Esencial de Calvin y Hobbes: Un Tesoro de Calvin y Hobbes
Bill Watterson

Santa Biblia, Nueva Versión Internacional
Anonymous
Calificación y Reseña
What do you think?
Reseñas de la comunidad
18,328 reseñas3.9
474,521 valoraciones
5
45%
4
30%
3
15%
2
7%
1
3%
Andy Marr·3 years ago
Fascinating, but also far too brutal for my tender little brain.
Sasha·6 years ago
I guess it's important to remember that this isn't just a socialist fable: it's also a book about a dog. That's certainly all I thought, when I was ten and I read and re-read this for the first several times. I just really liked dogs, and we couldn't have one, so I read a lot of books about them. Here's a book about Buck the Yukon sled dog. His bond with his human is so strong that they'll perform miracles for each other. That scene with the thousand pound sled is like the Rudy-sacks-the-quarter...
Kenny·7 years ago
He was mastered by the sheer surging of life, the tidal wave of being, the perfect joy of each separate muscle, joint, and sinew in that it was everything that was not death, that it was aglow and rampant, expressing itself in movement, flying exultantly under the stars. The Call Of The Wild ~~ Jack LondonWhen I was younger, my mother bought me a copy of
The Call Of The Wild
. It was part of a series of books for boys. I wish I had read it back then. It is a marvelous book. I'm only sorry t...
jessica·7 years ago
my goodness, this is a tough one for me to review. the abundance of violence and animal cruelty made this such an emotional read for me. i can understand why this is a classic and so well loved - there are many great themes in this book and the resolution is quite satisfying, but i struggled with most of the content. this was not a bad book, it just wasnt as enjoyable for me personally.
2.5 stars
2.5 stars
Sean Barrs ·9 years ago
Men are so cruel. The way they break animals is deplorable; they use them, exploit them and abuse them all in the name of sport, entertainment and human convenience. Men are cruel. They try to conquer rather than living in a world of mutual respect; it’s man who has lost his nature, and he imposes such a thing on everything he comes across, but the animals will fight back: “With a roar that was almost lion like in its ferocity, he again hurled himself at the man” Buck is kidnapped (dognapped is ...
Mark Lawrence·9 years ago
I remembered discovering either Call of the Wild or Whitefang when I was a boy and really liking it, so on finding this on our shelves I read it to Celyn (12 but too disabled to read).I found myself translating on the hoof as the book was written in 1903 and much of the language is quite Dickensian. Celyn's vocabulary, whilst largely unknown to me, must be derived from books and conversations, and neither of those would have supplied her with many of the words in Call of the Wild.I found myself ...
Orsodimondo·12 years ago
IL VALORE DELLA LIBERTÀ Buck è figlio di un maschio sanbernardo e di una madre pastore scozzese, e ha l'aspetto di un lupo.Nonostante l’ambientazione sia principalmente all’aria aperta, questo romanzo è è un capostipite del genere ‘carcerario’, autentica discesa agli inferi: perché Buck viene strappato alla sua vita di cane domestico, fatta di ozio riposo coccole e sicurezza, e sbattuto in un attimo in un mondo di cattività, violenza, repressione, prevaricazione – da un’esistenza protetta, da pa...
Ben Winch·14 years ago
I defy anyone - man, woman or child - not to like The Call of the Wild. It's the most exciting adventure, the most moving love story, the deepest meditation on a creature and its place in nature. If you aren't cheering for Buck the dog by the end of this you're either hard-hearted or a cat-lover.
Stephen·15 years ago
REVIEW ADVISORY: Please be aware that, while the following review contains a number of adorable animals pics, young Ricky Schroder, who starred in the movie version of the novel, will NOT appear...I feared that would raise the sugar content of this report to diabetically dangerous levels. Awwwwwww.....the classic “coming of age” story, with the nifty twister of having the main character be a pawky puppy going on doggiehood. I really licked it liked it, so two paws up there. BTW, I'm not going t...
brian ·17 years ago
i am a dog obsessive. i'm nuts. dogs are my moby dick. they're my opera-house in the jungle. if i had a genie in a bottle, i'd wish away all human life (including my own) so dogs could take over the world. wait. that'd be wish number two. number one would be that i had an olympic sized swimming pool filled with dogs and i could do a few laps. then i'd erase humanity. seriously. my dog is the coolest guy i've ever met, my best friend, and love of my life. if it sounds weird: piss off. i don't wan...