
The Jacket - (The Star-Rover) - by Jack London
Contents
CHAPTER I.
CHAPTER II.
CHAPTER III.
CHAPTER IV.
CHAPTER V.
CHAPTER VI.
CHAPTER VII.
CHAPTER VIII.
The narrator opens the tale with a haunting meditation on memory, childhood dreams, and the sense that every soul carries echoes of countless other lives. He speaks of being a “star‑rover,” a being who has walked as king, slave, and beast, each past whispering through his present voice. The prose weaves philosophical wonder with vivid, almost hallucinatory images, inviting listeners to contemplate how our earliest fears and fantasies might be fragments of forgotten existences.
Set against the stark backdrop of a prison cell, the story follows this introspective wanderer as he confronts an imminent, grim destiny—an execution that looms like a final punctuation to his tangled reincarnations. While he prepares for the rope that will end his current life, he grapples with a “red wrath” that has haunted him through ages, seeking meaning in the tangled tapestry of his many selves. The narrative balances eerie atmosphere with deep existential inquiry, promising a meditative journey into identity, memory, and the mystery of what lies beyond a single lifetime.
Language
en
Duration
~9 hours (560K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
1998-01-01
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1876–1916
Adventure, hardship, politics, and the wild all fed into his fiction, giving his stories a raw energy that still feels immediate. Best known for The Call of the Wild and White Fang, he helped shape the modern adventure novel while building one of the most remarkable literary careers of his era.
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