Friday, November 29, 2019
Jungle Essays (300 words) - Jurgis, The Jungle, Upton Sinclair
  Jungle  As I opened the cover of The Jungle, I anticipated reading a  tragic story about the cruelness inflicted upon a poor, working-class family. I  had read an excerpt from the novel and had conversed with people who had read  it; I thought the story was going to be solid, and perhaps even entertaining. I  was incredibly wrong. The beginning of the story started out slow, as it was  just another "American Dream" type story. Jurgis and family came to the    States seeking a better life and freedom from their homeland's injustices. The  story had potential, but the redundancy of the descriptions wore old. I only  need to hear once or maybe even twice how cold the winters were, or how evil the  packing bosses were. The only parts that I thought had any value were the  descriptions of the working facilities and what foulness and corruption were  found within. Such descriptions were there solely for the shock or disgust of  the reader. The end of the story was extremely confusing. I can understand why    Jurgis left his family after the death of his young wife, and then the death of  his only son. After his time in the country and working for the political  machines of Chicago, he became interested in the idea of socialism. With the  introduction of a socialist Jurgis, I wanted to put down the book. Where had the  whole socialist movement came from? I felt it made absolutely no sense to be in  this story. The story, at that point, needed to concentrate more on the reunited  family of Jurgis rather than the radical ideas circulating throughout Chicago.    Upton Sinclair painted an accurate historical picture with The Jungle, but he  wrote it without a sensible plot, with redundant and ambiguous details, and with  no appeal as a readable story. I recommend leaving this book on the shelf for  someone else to stumble through; I was not impressed.    
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