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The Jungle: (Starbooks Classics Editions)

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Book Details
Author(s) Upton Sinclair
ISBN / ASIN 1497536731
ISBN-13 9781497536739
Availability Usually ships in 24 hours
Sales Rank #848,275
Marketplace United States 🇺🇸
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Description
“The great corporation which employed you lied to you, and lied to the whole country----from top to bottom it was nothing but one gigantic lie.”
-- Upton Sinclair, The Jungle
The Jungle is a 1906 book written by the American journalist and novelist Upton Sinclair (1878–1968). Sinclair wrote the novel to portray the lives of immigrants in the United States in Chicago and similar industrialized cities. Many readers were most concerned with his exposure of health violations and unsanitary practices in the American meatpacking industry during the early 20th century, based on an investigation he did for a socialist newspaper.

The book depicts working class poverty, the absence of social programs, harsh and unpleasant living and working conditions, and a hopelessness among many workers. These elements are contrasted with the deeply rooted corruption of people in power. A review by the writer Jack London called it, "the Uncle Tom's Cabin of wage slavery."

Sinclair was considered a muckraker, or journalist who exposed corruption in government and business. He first published the novel in serial form in 1905 in the socialist newspaper, Appeal to Reason, between February 25, 1905, and November 4, 1905. In 1904, Sinclair had spent seven weeks gathering information while working incognito in the meatpacking plants of the Chicago stockyards for the newspaper. It was published as a book on 26 February 1906 by Doubleday and in a subscribers' edition.

A film version of the novel was made in 1914, but it has since become lost.
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