
Zlato
A novel about a strong and untamable prospector for gold in Alaska, Burning Daylight, who, after becoming immensely rich, faces the corruption of the big city, love, and a crisis of meaning in life. One of London's most successful novels.
Published in 1910, Gold was Jack London's best-selling and most popular novel during his lifetime. The work is divided into two parts: the first, dynamic and adventurous, takes place in the harsh Alaskan wilderness during the Klondike Gold Rush, while the second part is moved to the bustling San Francisco at the turn of the century.
The main character is Burning Daylight, a legendary prospector, adventurer and strong individual inspired by Nietzschean ideas – a man of enormous vital energy, courage and vitality. After years of hard work and danger in Alaska, he acquires enormous wealth. However, when he moves to the city, he is faced with a completely different world – a world of financial speculation, corruption, false splendor and moral decay of high society.
The novel powerfully depicts the conflict of a natural, vital man with a modern civilization that tries to crush him. Through Daylight, London explores the themes of greed, success, love and the search for the true meaning of life. Particularly impressive is the depiction of the romance with Grandma Mason, an intelligent and independent woman who will play a key role in the hero's transformation.
Gold is an exciting mix of adventure novel, social criticism and philosophical reflection. London shows all his strength as a storyteller here - vivid descriptions of the wilderness, realistic characters and sharp criticism of capitalism and American society in the early 20th century.
One copy is available
- Slight damage to the cover
- The cover is missing





