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This is a story about a dog named Buck who lives on a beautiful estate in California,
but is sold off as a sled dog.
After being badly beaten by a dog trainer, Buck is used to pull mail in the Arctic. Although
the work is tough, he learns quickly and soon takes over the sled team by killing the previous
leader.
The dog team is sold off to different sled drivers and nearly worked to death. They are
in need of rest, but because of mismanagement, the strength of the dogs gets drained out
of them until they are killed off one by one. Fortunately, Buck is saved by a man named
John Thornton, a kind man with a heart for animals.
John takes in Buck and helps him recover. Buck, having been mistreated by others in
the past, is apprehensive at first, but then grows to love John. In fact, Buck pulls a
1,000 pound sled to win John a bet.
John takes Buck and the rest of his dogs into the back country, searching for a mythical
Lost Cabin. During this search, Buck wanders into the forest by himself and meets a wild
wolf, which sparks a primal instinct within him.
One night, after returning from the forest, Buck sees that John has been killed by a group
of local Indians.
In the end, with nowhere else to go, Buck integrates into the local wolf pack, becoming
a part of local Indian mythology.
First, this story discusses the relationship between domestic and primal instincts. Buck
is introduced as a soft dog, living a luxurious life on the grounds of a mansion. But when
he is taken and placed in the wild with other dogs, something within him changes. Yet, these
changes are not foreign to him. It's like these instincts are already a part of him,
just unearthed.
And what makes this more relatable to readers, who don't necessary experience that call of
the wild in our highly modernized society, is how these primal instincts may have more
to do with morality than grunts and cavemen drawings.
The story suggests that often to survive, moral nature must die. As Buck tries to assimilate
to his new outdoor lifestyle, he is timid and almost polite, to the point where the
other dogs eat his food. However, he soon learns to steal food to survive. In fact,
he learns that it is easier to steal than not to steal.
But why would readers enjoy a story about non-talking dogs? It's because of the applicability
of the story to humans through the style of writing. As written, readers are placed in
the head of dog, trying to understand the sled dog culture.
And as the story goes on, readers discover how humanized Buck's personality is. Buck
is relatable as a character. Any person who has worked in a job that they didn't necessarily
want can understand the struggles Buck goes through in this story. It's a frustration
derived by helplessness, anger, and fear, all human emotions, yet felt by a dog and
projected to a level of relatability.