
A sweeping meditation on humanity’s restless wanderings, this work frames every migration as a “drift” sparked by the primal need to find food. From the first upright apes crossing mountain passes in search of berries to a penniless gentleman setting sail for Virginia, the narrative stitches together countless journeys driven not by romance but by hunger and survival.
The author charts these blind, often brutal movements across continents and eras—Aryan tribes moving east, Germanic hordes sweeping into Rome, and the relentless tide of peoples that reshaped the South Pacific islands. With a lyrical, almost poetic voice, the book weaves together anthropology, history, and philosophy, inviting listeners to see the familiar story of human expansion as a vast, interconnected current that still shapes our world today.
Language
en
Duration
~3 hours (176K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
1999-03-01
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1876–1916
Best known for vivid adventure stories like The Call of the Wild and White Fang, this American writer turned hard-lived experience into fast, memorable fiction. His work is full of survival, danger, and the pull of the wild.
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by Jack London

by Jack London

by Jack London

by Jack London

by Jack London

by Jack London

by Jack London

by Jack London