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Título: Martin Eden
Autor: Jack London
Narrador: Carlos Zambrano
Formato: Abridged
Duración: 3 hrs
Idioma: Español
Fecha de publicación: 05-18-06
Editor: Yoyo USA, Inc
Calificaciones: 2 de 5 de 2 votos
Categorías: Fiction, Contemporary
Resumen del editor:
Martin Eden, Jack London's semi-autobiographical novel about a struggling young writer, is considered by many to be the author's most mature work. Personifying London's own dreams of education and literary fame as a young man in San Francisco, Martin Eden's impassioned but ultimately ineffective battle to overcome his bleak circumstances makes him one of the most memorable and poignant characters Jack London ever created.
Opiniones de los miembros:
This book seems to be pirated!
This book seems to be pirated!
The only information about the copy of the book sent to me from Amazon.com is that it was printed in California on November 26 2017.
No publisher, no introduction--nothing. The type size is about a 5 on MS Word. Much too small for comfortable reading!
Seems pirated/illegal to me. No way of telling how accurate this copy is, how true to the original. And, who get the money?!
There is very likely a problem here.
These days there are no trustworthy publishers except for Prometheus Books and one or two others, but this copy of this book is blatant.
Not his best, but close enough
"Martin Eden" is my fifth foray into the works of Jack London. Although I don't find the excitement within that was apparent in "Sea Wolf," the passion is certainly evident. I have read that "Martin Eden" inspired more bad writers to sequester themselves with paper and pencil in unheated attics than any other book, and it is easy to determine why. Eden's obsession with learning and then creating the immortal printed word -- after falling for a woman above his class in society/socialist-conscious San Francisco -- is a powerful force that London expounds convincingly. Then, without warning, the sage advice "be careful what you wish for, it may come true," rears its ugly head. London also includes a line about ghosts that should be a classic, but isn't, and his description of a suicide ranks as the best of its kind. A WORD OF WARNING: Do not read the foreward until after. It tells too much of the story and robs some of the author's intended suprises. This is unforgivable. May the publisher rot in hell.
Self destruction,
"Martin Eden" is the surprising story of the man who faces deep depression right after he achieves long desired success. It might be interpreted as a novel in the spirit of Freud's "Beyond the Pleasure Principle" - that is, the story of a successful man who contemplates self-destruction.
London's own intimate life
A flawed but important and interesting read. An intimate peak into London's own life and rise to fame and success.
Martin Eden rocks!
A classic London gem, autobiographical, embodies the author's philosophies.
I thought it'd be dated, but, no, it is still awesome.