The Jungle Upton Sinclair Books

For nearly a century, the original version of Upton Sinclair's classic novel has remained almost entirely unknown. When it was published in serial form in 1905, it was a full third longer than the censored, commercial edition published in book form the following year. That expurgated commercial edition edited out much of the ethnic flavor of the original, as well as some of the goriest descriptions of the meat-packing industry and much of Sinclair's most pointed social and political commentary.
The Jungle Upton Sinclair Books
The book narrates a rather depressing tale. Immigrants have a hard time to hoe just coming here. They also have swindlers and other challenges. I can understand that I can only imagine how such a life would feel.The story takes you on a realistic narrative which visits the various pitfalls and snares for vulnerable populations. I would suppose with our current regime in charge, works of literature which speak for the plight of the immigrant might not be as popular.
This said, you can probably stop reading at the end when the exposition begins on socialism. Nothing of further note really happens to Jurgis. It seems that this last chapter would best serve as a warning to would be authors regarding where to stop.
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The Jungle Upton Sinclair Books Reviews
Sinclair successfully connects his readers emotionally to the characters, and you can't help but feel personally tied to the endlessly miserable lives that the early 20th century European immigrants endured in Chicago. The entire novel is seen through the eyes of a young Lithuanian man, and the obstacles and tragedies that befall him rise to the point where as the reader, you find yourself thinking that it would have been better if he had never come to America at all. To add insult to injury, he finds work in Chicago's meat-packing industry just like thousands of other immigrants. The conditions are absolutely DISGUSTING (seriously, do not consume food while reading) for the animals, the people who work there, and the people who eat the food.
In fact, this novel sparked investigation into the industry that changed national health regulations. The scary part is that nearly everything Sinclair described was found to be TRUE. The only thing that wasn't proven was whether or not the bodies of workers who fell to their deaths ended up in the finished meat products. However, the inspectors also weren't able to definitively report to President Roosevelt that it didn't happen.
Much to Sinclair's dismay, the book attracted attention primarily to the conditions in the meat-packing industry. His intention, however, was to raise awareness to the immigrant's plight in America. After seeing the public reception of the book, Sinclair said, "I aimed at the public's heart, and by accident I hit it in the stomach."
The protagonist's story continues far after his stint in meat-packing ends, but many people's attention span did not.
It's not a pleasant piece of literature, but it's hard to put down and is very eye-opening on many levels.
I read the book the JUNGLE when I was quite young. I just read it again. I did not remember the storyline at all. The story of one man and his struggles. I do believe however this book had a major influence on shaping my attitude toward the need to control big business and the need to provide a safety net for all. I do not remember if it was my introduction to socialism. I think that came through discussions with my mom while I was still in elementary school.
This book seems relevant again with the recent resurgence of the rich corrupt politicians in government under Trump. And now in contrast come a group of young liberals with dreams of fairness. Like the dream of the main character , a dream to make the struggle worth holding on.
The comparison of political zealousness, religion, and today’s Trump worship ran through my head.As well as the history that followed this book which was written at the beginning of the 20th century.
I absolutely hated the last 20 pages. It was a very long rant on the priceless virtues of socialism and the protagonist Jurgis was never even mentioned except to say he was enthralled by the speaker (a socialist meanwhile the reader is treated to this blowhard and his grand idea for socialism taking over the city of Chicago. Alas, that seems to have happened 115 years later - today that is. I have heard enough from crazy uncle bernie and I do not need it from my reading material. Incidentally, I read this book, like nearly everyone else, in 8th grade and I am just doing a lot of re-reading of classics from those days but I do not remember this book ending like this. I wonder what AI thought of it back then.
Fifty years later and I re-read this book. I had to read this in high school, but I wasn't mature or studious enough to understand the significance, even though my grandparents were all immigrants. The world of slaughterhouses hasn't changed much in the past 100 years, poverty, and children working to support their family. Both of my parents had to quit school to support their families or starve. You knnw the old expression "what goes around, comes around?" Those days look like they are coming around again.
The Jungle is a great book. However, the copy of the book I ordered from , publisher listed as CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform (November 22, 2017), is possibly the worst quality I've ever seen in a book. Even the paragraphs are not indented, making this copy difficult to read. Order a Penguin or another trusted publisher.
The unbelievable suffering of Jurgis and his family was about as depressing as anything I have ever read. The condition of the immigrants was inhuman times 1,000. And the packing houses and the lack of regulations to prevent such horrific practices was shocking. Where Sinclair lost me was when the book turned into a one sided socialist tract that ignored the positive things associated with capitalism and democracy. IMO, history has proven him wrong.
The book narrates a rather depressing tale. Immigrants have a hard time to hoe just coming here. They also have swindlers and other challenges. I can understand that I can only imagine how such a life would feel.
The story takes you on a realistic narrative which visits the various pitfalls and snares for vulnerable populations. I would suppose with our current regime in charge, works of literature which speak for the plight of the immigrant might not be as popular.
This said, you can probably stop reading at the end when the exposition begins on socialism. Nothing of further note really happens to Jurgis. It seems that this last chapter would best serve as a warning to would be authors regarding where to stop.

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