The World of Jack London
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  1. "The Red One"Cosmopolitan, v. 65 (October 1918), 34-41, 132,135-138. [RO]

    In a letter to Upton Sinclair dated October 10, 1931, Charmian London wrote that the "suggestion of the great, round, possibly-meteorite" came from London's friend, the poet George Sterling. (Jack London Newsletter, January-April, 1971, p. 43.) The playlet "The First Poet" (in TT), and "The Hussy" (entry 175) were other London-Sterling collaborations.


  1. The Red One — New York: The Macmillan Co., October 1918. [RO]


  1. "In the Cave of the Dead"Cosmopolitan, v. 65 (November 1918), 74-81, 119-121. [OMM]

    Reprinted as "Shin-Bones" in OMM.

1919

  1. "On the Makaloa Mat"Cosmopolitan, v. 66 (March 1919), 16-23, 133-135. [OMM]

  2. "The Bones of Kahekili"Cosmopolitan, v. 67 (July 1919), 95-100, 102, 104. [OMM]


  1. On the Makaloa Mat — New York: The Macmillan Co., September 1919. [OMM]


1922

  1. "Whose Business Is to Live" — September 1922. [DC]


  1. Dutch Courage and Other Stories — New York: The Macmillan Co., September 1922. [DC]


1924

  1. "Eyes of Asia"Cosmopolitan Magazine, v. 77 (September 1924), 24-31, 148, 150-156.

    This story represents part of a novel London was writing at the time of his death on November 22, 1916. He called the work-in-progress Cherry. (Letters of Jack London, p. 1588.) This work was completed as a short story by Charmian K. London. See her "How Jack London Would Have Ended 'Eyes of Asia,'" Cosmopolitan Magazine, 77 (October 1924), 78-79, 124, 126, 128, 130-131. This story was reprinted as Cherry (Jack London Journal, v. 6, 1999.)

The World of Jack London
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