Jack London

John Griffith Chaney, better known as Jack London (12 January 1876–22 November 1916), was
an American author who pioneered the art of commercial fiction, which made him a prominent
figure of the international literary arena. As a part of the radical literary group, ‘The Crowd,’ London
projected his socialist ideas through his works. Known as a rebel in his teens, London also spent
30 days in jail for vagrancy. The experience of imprisonment motivated him to attend college to
become a writer.

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