In The Call of the Wild, a novel written by Jack London, Buck, a southland pet is forced to a completely new world of harsh weather and dangerous work that he has to persevere through. At the very beginning of the book, Buck is ripped from his home, and sold into a new life. He had no choice, and was shipped across the country to the Yukon Valley, a place of vastly different terrain and climate. Sold by Manuel, a human he trusted, he was officially taken from his everyday lifestyle and adopted into the role of a sled dog. Shocked and angry, Buck attempted to fight off the new people, but ultimately was left to adjust to the stark contrast of the Yukon and his home …show more content…
One thing that both Buck and my great grandmother had to deal with was losing company and friends. In The Call of the Wild, Buck experiences the death of multiple friends in the Yukon. Whether this be to mistreatment, murder, or dogfights each time he is forced to lose that sense of companionship. My great grandmother may have not lost her friends to the tragedy that is death, but she did lose many friends that she had grown close to in her years of growing up. Another thing that both Buck and my great grandmother have in common, is their ability to work through being the outcast. In the beginning of the book, Buck is brand new to his pack, and had never driven a sled a day in his life. He was a pet and the other dogs treated him differently because of that. My great grandmother was also treated differently because she wasn’t like all the other kids with married parents. She was left out, and excluded while other kids were free to do what they wished. Due to the life changing experiences that my great grandmother and Buck had to face, they had to deal with being a far cry from everyone around them, and the battles they confronted because of