533 words
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Jack London was born John Griffith Chaney in San Francisco on January 12, 1876. An adventurer and Jack of all trades in his youth, London achieved fame and fortune as a fiction writer and journalist. But he never forgot his working-class roots and remained a life-long advocate of workers’ rights, unionism, and revolutionary socialism. (See his essay “What Life Means to Me.”)
But Jack London was no ordinary Leftist, for he was acutely racially conscious (see, for example, “The Yellow Peril“) and had such a marked Nietzschean/Social Darwinist ethical sensibility that Ragnar Redbeard’s infamous Might is Right or The Survival of the Fittest was widely, though mistakenly, attributed to him. Thus London is also a favorite writer of New Rightists and White Nationalists, particularly West Coast White Nationalists and those who hope for the re-emergence of a racially conscious Left.
London’s best-known books are Call of the Wild and White Fang, drawing upon his experiences in the Klondike Gold Rush; The Sea-Wolf, a psychological thriller and portrait of a brutal sea captain; and The Iron Heel, a dystopian novel about oligarchy and revolutionary socialism which became one of the literary inspirations of William Pierce’s The Turner Diaries.
The Library of America has published two handsome hardcover volumes of London’s principal works: Novels and Stories: Call of the Wild, White Fang, The Sea-Wolf, Klondike and Other Stories and Novels and Social Writings: The People of the Abyss, The Road, The Iron Heel, Martin Eden, John Barleycorn. The Portable Jack London is a well-chosen single-volume paperback selection of his writings. James L. Haley’s recent biography Wolf: The Lives of Jack London is a true tale as exciting as London’s best fiction. The best online resource on Jack London is The World of Jack London, which contains virtually all of his writings plus invaluable secondary literature.
In 1905, Jack London bought a ranch in Sonoma County where he experimented with ecologically sustainable farming and ranching techniques. In 1916, Jack London died of kidney failure. He was only 40 years old. He left two daughters, plus 20 novels, 10 collections of short stories, three plays, three collections of essays, two autobiographical memoirs, and countless other works.
Counter-Currents has published the following works by Jack London:
- “Capitalism, Socialism, and Dysgenics.”
- “How I Became a Socialist.”
- “What Life Means to Me.”
- “The Yellow Peril” (German translation here).

You can buy Kerry Bolton’s Artists of the Right here.
See also the following works about Jack London:
- Beau Albrecht, “Jack London’s The Iron Heel as Prophecy,” Part One and Part Two.
- Mark Gullick, “Poor Boy: Jack London’s London.”
- Mark Gullick reviews Earle Labor’s Jack London: An American Life.
- Andrew Hamilton, “Jack London’s ‘To Build a Fire’.”
- Instauration, “Jack London.”
- Dietrich Wolf, “The Soul of Jack London,” Part One, Two, Three, and Four.
The following articles mention Jack London:
- Jonathan Bowden, “Robert E. Howard & the Heroic.”
- Julius Evola, “The Overcoming of the Superman.”
- Greg Johnson, “West-Coast White Nationalism” (French translation here, Slovak translation here).
- Spencer J. Quinn, “On Liberals & the White Ethnostate.”
- Nicholas R. Jeelvy, “Old Man Winter’s Return May Not be So Welcome This Time.”
See also posts tagged Jack London.


5 comments
I had no idea that today is his birthday and I came here earlier to look for this exact article I had seen here in the past because I am in the middle of reading The Call Of The Wild and White Fang for the first time. As I said in the above article, this is one of the many reasons I love this site Greg. Thank you for this indispensable resource.
Happy birthday, Jack London! 🙃
I am first of all a white man, and only then a socialist. — Jack London
London’s solidarity with working people was sincere, but he really didn’t intend on going full-on Kumbaya with every conceivable group in the world. He fell into a rare category of right-leaning anti-capitalists, loosely categorized as the “Third Position.” I think in the 19th century Georges Vacher de Lapouge favored an anti-leftist, right-leaning form of socialism. Lapouge hated left-wing communists, but also hated capitalists, bankers, and finance. He felt both communists and capitalists were a menace to peoples of advanced race and culture. Left-wing movements bastardize advanced races in a farcical utopian equality. Capitalism bastardizes human beings by degrading them into labor units for sale in a labor market, enslaved and controlled by the need for money. Even Hitler decried social division based on social class. He wanted a unified Germany unbroken by classes or castes.
Extremely happy memories of my mother reading Call of the Wild each night to me and my sisters as a kid when we were on holidays in some run down but white utopia summer caravan park in the 1980s.
Does a Jack London get published today by the regime? Think we know the answer but we will always have our Jack Londons.
I first learned about The Iron Heel from an interview of John Metzger by Christopher Hitchens in the early 90’s. Given the awful working conditions in many industries in turn off the century America, socialism was a justifiable pursuit. Jack London was quite the swashbuckling adventurer, and prolific writer. Happy birthday, Jack!
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