Cormac McCarthy’s Pulitzer Prize-winning novel The Road is presented as a Folio collector’s edition, with artist Gérard DuBois’s beautiful and desolate illustrations and Michael Chabon’s New York Review of Books essay. Winner of the Moira Gemmill Illustrator of the Year Prize at the V&A Illustration Awards 2022.
The Call of the Wild
Illustrated by Abigail Rorer
Introduced by David Vann
A powerful story of nature and nurture, Jack London’s The Call of the Wild is beautifully illustrated by Abigail Rorer and introduced by David Vann for this exceptional Folio Society edition.
Product Gallery Thumbnails
Set during the Alaskan gold rush of 1897, Jack London’s classic adventure story will captivate new readers, while those who first encountered The Call of the Wild as children will find re-reading it richly rewarding. The story is moving, its themes powerful and elemental: the thin line that divides civilisation from nature, the relationship between humans and animals, and the true meaning of strength, both mental and physical. It is also a great adventure story; a classic American tale of a drifter and survivor. For this unique collector’s edition, best-selling author David Vann has contributed a fascinating introduction, while Abigail Rorer’s illustrations are evocative of the frozen Yukon.
Bound in cloth blocked with a design by Abigail Rorer
Set in Perpetua
120 pages
Frontispiece and 7 black & white illustrations
Plain Slipcase
9˝ x 6¼˝
David Vann spent his childhood in Alaska, and knows the landscape intimately. His own best-selling and award-winning Legend of a Suicide is set in the Alaskan wilderness and he trawls his rich cache of memories for his exclusive introduction to this edition. The beautiful setting provides the canvas for a story filled with camaraderie and brutality, and Abigail Rorer’s startling black-and-white woodcuts perfectly capture the harsh landscape, her eight illustrations portraying the grim reality of life for prospectors and animals alike, while a poignant portrait of John Thornton with his rescued dog Buck shows the depth of their bond.
During the Yukon Gold Rush, an estimated 100,000 people migrated to the region in the hope of striking it rich. While humans did the prospecting, dogs were needed to pull sleighs, and Buck is perfectly suited to the work and conditions. A large cross-breed, he lives a pampered life in California until he is kidnapped and sold to workers in the Yukon, where he is frequently beaten and forced to drag backbreaking loads. After one particularly brutal attack leaves Buck close to death, he is rescued by prospector John Thornton. Buck repays him with absolute loyalty and devotion and goes on to become the most famous pack dog in Alaska. But when their bond is broken, Buck escapes the world of humans and fulfils his destiny to become a leader of wolves. Jack London himself took part in the Yukon Gold Rush in 1903, aged just 21, and three years later The Call of the Wild was published to immediate acclaim. London’s writing would prove to be a great influence on authors such as Jack Kerouac and George Orwell, directly inspiring Kerouac’s On the Road.