The People Of The Abyss - Jack London
Shared by:martin88
Written by Jack London
Read by Peter Yearsley
Unabridged
‘No other book of mine took so much of my young heart and tears as that study of the economic degradation of the poor.’ Jack London; ‘At a time of heightened concern about the poor and homeless on the streets of London, the re-appearance of The People of the Abyss is to be welcomed. It is a complex text combining awkwardly a passionate critique of modern civilisation with a rhetoric of racial degeneration, but it is one that resonates disturbingly with much contemporary comment on the problem.’ John Marriott, University of East London ‘It is written with the smoldering anger of turn-of-the-century revolutionary socialism. There are no gray shadings in London’s economic world. There is only the evil of capitalism and the saintly suffering of the poor. The rich had had their stories told in mass periodicals, and London felt it was time to let the ignored speak. He thus wrote the biographies of the people who have been exploited by imperialism and capitalism. This is the book that counters the Horatio Alger story. For every Alger, for every Rockefeller, there is a mass of sufferers whose plight enabled the speedy rise to wealth of a few. In its sociological and journalistic documentation of poverty is a call for direct action. Wealth blinds, and London makes us see. With this reprinting of London’s incredibly important and readable book, Pluto Press and London remind us of how economic exploitation must always be fought, that we must always be educated in the lives of the unfortunate.’ James Williams, editor and publisher of the Jack London Journal ‘During my youth I walked the streets of East London, following in the footsteps of Jack London. He brought back, so movingly to this young reader, the poverty and suffering as well as the laughter and tears manifest in the outcasts and dispossessed of our locale at that time. Together with the revelations of Charles Booth, G.R. Sims et al, that book helped shatter the smug composure of Edwardian England, as well as providing a transatlantic best seller.’ Professor William J. Fishman, Queen Mary and Westfield College ‘In 1902, Jack London, posing as an out-of-work sailor, went underground into the belly of the beast: the slums of London’s East End. With passion and vision, he used his skill as a journalist to expose the horrors of the Abyss to the world. Because of his ability to blend in with working people and put them at their ease, because he donned their clothing, and spent nights on the street–working odd jobs, sleeping in the homeless shelters–he gained an insight into the slum life which remains unique. By interweaving the personal stories of the people he encountered with political analysis, he produced a vibrant work of nonfiction, which remains relevant to this day. Consider the following: about one in five children in the U.S. live in poverty. Poverty is war, and it rages on with no end in sight, and the management is still guilty of mismanaging the wealth. Beyond a shadow of a doubt, the People of the Abyss are among us today.
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| Creation Date: | Tue, 10 Jan 2012 15:50:16 -0500 |
| This is a Multifile Torrent | |
| The People of the Abyss.m4b 178.91 MBs | |
| folder.jpg 62.24 KBs | |
| info.txt 1.36 KBs | |
| Torrent downloaded from Demonoid.me.txt 46 Bytes | |
| Combined File Size: | 178.97 MBs |
| Piece Size: | 256 KBs |
| Comment: | Updated by AudioBook Bay |
| Encoding: | UTF-8 |
| Info Hash: | 8afd078ed97e492d33f0cc8cb98e1f4d7fc342b6 |
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This post has 3 comments with rating of 3/5
January 16th, 2012
Much appreciated :)
October 24th, 2018
So this is taken from Librivox so there’s not really much point in it being on here I guess. But gifthorse etc someone has taken the trouble so here it is. As with all Librivox it is not the best recording, a slightly plodding, monotone voice.
January 5th, 2023
librivox has no place here…it’s indigestible.
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