John Karkauer's novel "Entering the Wild" shows a real story about a young man named Christopher McCandless who created a new life for himself by living civilization in the wilderness. This story shows how Christopher develops and matures through a general dilemma through stories and learns valuable lessons on the way. Christopher's character is to understand some new courses such as finding true happiness, ignoring judgment of others, recognizing that material things are only material things, not others It will develop by.
Establishment of fire in Jack London In his short story "Building a Fire", Jack London depicts a violent conflict between man and nature. The essence of this story is the harsh environment of the Yukon Trail. London chose to use nature as a confrontation almost against the main character's power in his struggle for survival. By giving a lot of human characteristics to the environment, London has produced a lot of mistakes that can not actually happen, realized the fate of the main character through stories, realizing the personality of nature.
Jack London fires Jack London's short story "Building Fire" tells the relationship between man and nature. This story takes place on Yukon's long night. An unnamed hero moves along the way to the mining camp along with the puppy. The man violated the recommendations of local people and he noticed in a short time that he should wait. As Le Mans exhale before arriving at the ground, the temperature is very low. The main obstacle of his journey was that many of the covered springs means death of the dead.
By "making the fire", Jack London created the universe indifferent to the wilderness of Alaska. As the main evidence of indifference, London chose not to nominate his protagonist. At the beginning of London, at the beginning I explained how humans adapt to the environment by commenting "The average person's vulnerability can only live in certain narrow heat and cold" (10). London is showing not just as an opponent but with the present force alone. London wrote: "The coolest snaps will never freeze these fountains ... they are traps" (12). The character said it was a warning and not a natural threat to him. Eventually, when "branches are covering the load of snow" (17), a retreat of people will happen. London wrote this not because of the hostile nature to this person but merely because the person chose the place of fire. Because of the loneliness and cold of the environment, men do not oppose the interaction, they die in an indifferent and indifferent way.