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^ Columbia Encyclopedia "Jack London", "Beset in his later years by alcoholism and financial difficulties, London committed suicide at the age of 40."

  • ^ The Jack London Online Collection: Jack London's death certificate.

  • ^ The Jack London Online Collection: Biography.

  • ^ "Did Jack London Commit Suicide?" Archived September 14, 2008, at the Wayback Machine, The World of Jack London

  • ^ "Martin Eden by Jack London | Goodreads". Goodreads: Martin Eden.

  • ^ admin (June 5, 2019). "Jack London: Martin Eden - by Franklin Walker". Scraps from the loft. Retrieved July 22, 2022.

  • ^ "Jack London letters to Sinclair Lewis, dated September through December 1910" (PDF). Utah State University University Libraries Digital Exhibits. Retrieved January 5, 2023.

  • ^ "The Literary Zoo". Life. Vol. 49. January–June 1907. p. 130.

  • ^ "The Retriever and the Dynamite Stick -- A Remarkable Coincidence". The New York Times. The New York Times Company. August 16, 1902. Retrieved April 20, 2022.

  • ^ "Young, Everton Ryerson". Dictionary of Canadian Biography. Retrieved January 6, 2014.

  • ^ "Memorable Manitobans: Egerton Ryerson Young (1840–1909)". The Manitoba Historical Society. Retrieved January 7, 2014.

  • ^ "Is Jack London a Plagiarist?". The Literary Digest. 34: 337. 1907.

  • ^ Kingman 1979, p. 118.

  • ^ Letter to "The Bookman," April 10, 1906, quoted in full in Jack London; Dale L. Walker; Jeanne Campbell Reesman (2000). No mentor but myself: Jack London on writing and writers. Stanford University Press. p. 97. ISBN 978-0804736350. "The World, however, did not charge me with plagiarism. It charged me with identity of time and situation. Certainly I plead guilty, and I am glad that the World was intelligent enough not to charge me with identity of language."

  • ^ Jack London; Dale L. Walker; Jeanne Campbell Reesman (2000). No mentor but myself: Jack London on writing and writers. Stanford University Press. p. 121. ISBN 978-0804736350. "The controversy with Frank Harris began in the Vanity Fair issue of April 14, 1909, in an article by Harris entitled 'How Mr. Jack London Writes a Novel.' Using parallel columns, Harris demonstrated that a portion of his article, 'The Bishop of London and Public Morality,' which appeared in a British periodical, The Candid Friend, on May 25, 1901, had been used almost word-for-word in his 1908 novel, The Iron Heel."

  • ^ Stewart Gabel (2012). Jack London: a Man in Search of Meaning: A Jungian Perspective. AuthorHouse. p. 14. ISBN 978-1477283332. When he was tramping, arrested and jailed for one month for vagrancy at about 19 years of age, he listed "atheist" as his religion on the necessary forms (Kershaw, 1997).

  • ^ Who's Who in Hell: A Handbook and International Directory for Humanists, Freethinkers, Naturalists, Rationalists, and Non-Theists. Barricade Books (2000), ISBN 978-1569801581


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