Whitehorse, Yukon Essays

  • The History of Air North

    658 Words  | 2 Pages

    within the Yukon (the westernmost and smallest of Canada’s three federal territories) between the Yukon and British Columbia, Alberta, Northwest Territories and Alaska (Fly Air North, 2013). These services also include scheduled passenger service, charter services for passenger and/or cargo and cargo and ground handling services (Fly Air North, 2013). The charter passenger service is provided throughout Canada and the United States. The Yukon’s airline is headquartered in Whitehorse, Yukon. It is the

  • My Favorite Vacation to the Last Frontier, Fairbanks, Alaska

    592 Words  | 2 Pages

    However, my most memorable trip was to Fairbanks, Alaska to visit my oldest brother Keith. While I was there the sun shined for approximately twenty hours a day, the mosquitos were unlike anything I had ever experienced, and we went fishing on the Yukon River. During the summer months in Alaska, the sun shines for about 20 hours a day. All the daylight was nice, but could cause problems as well. We could stay outside as long as we wanted. We did not have to worry about running out of daylight and

  • Call Of The Wild Research Paper

    1060 Words  | 3 Pages

    Changing your everyday life can sometimes require you to learn new things and develop new abilities that may or may not be difficult. In The Call of The Wild, by Jack London, Buck is taken to the Yukon Territory (in Canada) where he must learn to develop new skills and learn to live in his new life and environment. However, my father did not have to develop to his environment, he had to adapt to new life struggles and substantial changes. While both my father and Buck had to adjust to vastly different

  • Symbolism In The Call Of The W

    542 Words  | 2 Pages

    In Jack London's book, The Call of the Wild, he symbolizes many things in the book. Buck, gold sacks, Mercedes, and others are looked on as symbolic. In this essay, you will find out what these items symbolize. The main character in the book is Buck, a half St. Bernard, half Scotch shepherd dog. In the story, he is betrayed by someone he trusts and is thrown into a harsh world. A world where you must work or be discarded. He adapts to the harsh environment, and soon enough becomes the leader of a

  • Jack London: To Build A Fire

    880 Words  | 2 Pages

    Introduction Jack London had already established himself as a popular writer when his story "To Build a Fire" appeared in the Century Magazine in 1908. This tale of an unnamed man's disastrous trek across the Yukon Territory near Alaska was well received at the time by readers and literary critics alike. While other works by London have since been faulted as overly sensational or hastily written, "To Build a Fire" is still regarded by many as an American classic. London based the story on his

  • Imagery In Jack London's To Build A Fire

    699 Words  | 2 Pages

    Jack London’s “To Build a Fire,” is a story about a man who travels only alongside a husky through the frigid conditions of the Yukon, and becomes a victim to Mother Nature. The man was warned before hand by an old man that he should not travel alone through the frigid Yukon. He ignored the old man’s advice and tried to prove to him that he would be able to cross the Yukon on his own. As the man traveled he was able to recognize the dangerous conditions around him and notice what it was doing to his

  • The Naturalistic Ideals of Jack London

    818 Words  | 2 Pages

    an impoverished life and struggled to earn more money to support himself and his mother. In an attempt to find a small fortune, London joined the Klondike Gold Rush in 1897. Unfortunately, he returned home penniless. However, his adventures in the Yukon provided him the most epic experiences that guided him into writing some of his most famous, widely acclaimed literary works. His novels focus primarily on naturalism, a type of literature in which the characters are shaped by their environment through

  • “To Build a Fire”

    832 Words  | 2 Pages

    “To Build a Fire” is a short story written by Jack London. It is viewed as a masterpiece of naturalist fiction. “To Build a Fire” features a miner who is traveling to the Yukon Territory with a dog as his companion. The miner is the protagonist and the dog companion is called the foil. The dog plays off of the traits of the protagonist. “The central motif of “To Build a Fire” concerns the struggle of man versus nature.” (Short Story Criticism) The most argued point in the short story is the reason

  • Summary Of Ernest Hemingway's Big Two-Hearted River Part 1

    933 Words  | 2 Pages

    Warfare and fire share a similar outcome related to death and destruction. Ernest Hemingway wrote “Big Two-Hearted River: Part 1”, with the protagonist Nick Adams on a hiking excursion along a tributary leading to Lake Superior. Once Nick comprehends that he is unable to forget his violent past in war, he must change his disposition on life and start a full body transformation similar to the nature around him. Even though devastation and death are prominent in “Big Two-Hearted River: Part 1”, Hemingway

  • Analysis Of I Fought The Apemen Of Mount St Helens

    1508 Words  | 4 Pages

    Deep within the Washington wilderness in the shadows of Mount St. Helen lies the infamous Ape Canyon. Upon these steep shallow cliffs, strange encounters have emerged over the past century. In 1924 a group of seasoned miners set out on a routine expedition searching for gold. However, what they encountered changed their lives forever. It was here that allegedly famous attack by a group of sasquatches occurred. In the short autobiography, I Fought the Apemen of Mt. St. Helens by Fred Beck, one of

  • Naturalism In Jack London's To Build A Fire

    792 Words  | 2 Pages

    Naturalism is about the conflicts that bring out instincts and determination for survival. Jack London’s “To Build a Fire” is a story about a man and his journey to realization when he is forced to survive in the harsh wintery weather of Alaska. We begin with a man who is portrayed as very cocky with what appears as a lack of forward thinking. “He experienced a pang or regret that he had not devised a nose-strap … but it didn’t matter much, after all. What were frosted cheeks? A bit painful, that’s

  • Jack London's To Build A Fire

    735 Words  | 2 Pages

    Jack London’s “To Build a Fire,” is about the struggles of a man in the harsh winter conditions of the Yukon. The man was purposely not given a name to demonstrate the severe environment that is more important than his individuality. In the tale he had been in a constant search for “the boys” who could potentially provide shelter, food, and warmth. However, the man totally disregards the advice from the wise old-timer, which puts him in real danger. Throughout his journey a dog that instinctively

  • Struggle With Himself In Jack London's To Build A Fire

    686 Words  | 2 Pages

    A Mans Struggle With Himself Jack London’s “To Build A Fire” could be described as the ultimate man versus nature story. The main character battling nature’s every attempt to kill him and striving forward to find his friends and the warmth they would bring. However; after reading through the story multiple times I believe that the underling element of this story is not man versus nature but merely man versus himself. Throughout the story we can see the events that led up to the man’s undoing were

  • Where I M Calling From

    1347 Words  | 3 Pages

    The life of an addict is defined by a constant state catch and release with sobriety. The addict’s life is a constant state of New Year’s resolutions of cleaning up their own life and attaining the blissful state of sobriety. In Raymond Carver’s short story “Where I’m Calling From,” he describes the story of a few men who are in a “drying out” facility trying to recover from alcoholism. While at the facility, the director tells some of the men to read a work of literature by Jack London.The narrator

  • What Are The Similarities Between To Build A Fire And The Ledge

    1131 Words  | 3 Pages

    When people commit unreasonable actions, they shall suffer. Arrogance often leads to one’s downfall. No sense in taking chances if one does not have to, yet these two individuals decide to take the risk. Death from the cold, these two arrogant men had to suffer through. One on land, clear-cutting trees in frigid temperatures, while the other, hunts ducks with his family, on a sinking hump in the blizzarding seas. In Jack London’s “To Build A Fire” and Lawrence Sargent Hall’s “The Ledge” both

  • Jack London's To Build A Fire

    593 Words  | 2 Pages

    The story I will be analyzing and evaluating in my essay is To Build A Fire by Jack London. Jack London was a man who struggled much early in his life and he drew upon those harsh experiences in his writing. Though his life had a difficult beginning, Jack aspired to make a better man of himself and after great tribulation made his mark as an incredible writer. The following is an analysis and evaluation of what I think is one of his more intriguing stories. The story To Build A Fire takes place in

  • How Did Jack London Survive

    691 Words  | 2 Pages

    There are many factor that determines your survival in the wilderness. To survive, you not only need enough and correct supplies but you also need luck and to stay calm. In the story “To Build a Fire” the man and the dog was trying to cross the Yukon Territory of northern Canada and he was traveling under freezing cold weather. To him, fifty degrees below zero simply meant a danger of frostbite and the need for warm clothes. It did not lead him to think about how vulnerable he was in this frozen

  • Anchorage Descriptive Writing

    533 Words  | 2 Pages

    The great city of Anchorage calls my name, in the radiant crystal flakes of snow delitcaley making its way down to Alaska to seek refuge on the ground. The city of my birth calls my name to roam around in the beautiful white snow. The description of Anchorage, Alaska can be seen all in a picture long ago a picture of a four year old girl smiling not having a clue in the world that she would no longer be apart of the glorious snow glistening near her shuffle. All the way to McAllen,Texas where thirteen

  • Short Story To Build A Fire

    505 Words  | 2 Pages

    In the short story to build a fire. The majestic alaska yukon, a man named john had just moved in. Many mistakes which john had done when he went to the man off sulphur creek. The man had told John three things.Never to travel alone,and not to travel when it is 75 below zero are two of the things he had said to john. John had also not packed enfo food ,and later in the story he has a small fire ,but is not aware of his surrounding. When you move somewhere new and a person who lives there gives

  • Naturalism in Jack London's To Build a Fire

    1273 Words  | 3 Pages

    dog would not let him come near he was forced to concoct another plan. His idea was that if he ran all the way to the camp, he would be able to survive. Unfortunately, that plan failed as well and the man perished in the cold, numbing snow of the Yukon. Overall, naturalism is the most realistic literary movement. It parallels life more than any other movement because it reveals the fact that nature has not heart and no emotions. Nature feels no compassion for human struggles and will continue on