Few books have so affected radical social changes as The Jungle, first published serially in 1906. Exposing unsanitary conditions in the meat-packing industry in Chicago, Sinclair's novel gripped Americans by the stomach, contributing to the passage of the first Food and Drug Act. If you've never read this classic novel, don't be put off by its gruesome reputation. Upton Sinclair was a Pulitzer Prize-winning novelist who could turn even an exposE into a tender and moving novel. Jurgis Rudkus, a Lithuanian immigrant, comes to America in search of a fortune for his family. He accepts the harsh realities of a working man's lot, laboring with naive vigor-until, his health and family sacrificed, he understands how the heavy wheels of the industrial machine can crush the strongest spirit.
Am Fließband : Roman über Henry Ford und Abner Shutt
Upton Sinclair
bookThe Jungle : A Powerful Tale of Survival, Corruption, and Reform in America's Meatpacking Industry
Upton Sinclair, Zenith Horizon Publishing
bookThe Jungle : A Powerful Exposé of Labor, Corruption, and the American Dream
Upton Sinclair, Zenith Evergreen Literary Co
bookThe Jungle : Exposing the Truth
Upton Sinclair, Zenith Crescent Moon Press
bookEl fin del mundo
Upton Sinclair
bookEntre dos mundos
Upton Sinclair
bookDer Dschungel
Upton Sinclair
book100%
Upton Sinclair, Sheba Blake
bookMammonart
Upton Sinclair
book100% : The Story of a Patriot
Upton Sinclair
audiobookThe Jungle
Upton Sinclair
audiobookbook