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There are 20 critical essays on To Build a Fire.
Critical Essays on To Build a Fire

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Critical Essay by Lee Clark Mitchell
9,167 words, approx. 31 pages
 In the following essay, Mitchell explores London's narrative techniques in “To Build a Fire,” particularly the use of repetitive language and images.
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Critical Essay by Lee Clark Mitchell
9,167 words, approx. 31 pages
 In the following essay, Mitchell explores London's narrative techniques in “To Build a Fire,” particularly the use of repetitive language and images.
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Critical Essay by George R. Adams
4,922 words, approx. 16 pages
 In the following essay, Adams investigates ambiguities in “To Build a Fire” and suggests another perspective on the story.
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Critical Essay by George R. Adams
4,922 words, approx. 16 pages
 In the following essay, Adams investigates ambiguities in “To Build a Fire” and suggests another perspective on the story.
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Critical Essay by Arnold Chapman
4,434 words, approx. 15 pages
 In the following essay, Chapman finds parallels between London's “To Build a Fire” and Horacio Quiroga's “La insolación.”
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Critical Essay by Arnold Chapman
4,434 words, approx. 15 pages
 In the following essay, Chapman finds parallels between London's “To Build a Fire” and Horacio Quiroga's “La insolación.”
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Critical Essay by Earle Labor and King Hendricks
3,769 words, approx. 13 pages
 In the following essay, Labor and Hendricks contrast London's two versions of “To Build a Fire,” concluding that the first is “a well-made boys' story; the second version is a classic for all ages.”
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Critical Essay by Earle Labor and King Hendricks
3,769 words, approx. 13 pages
 In the following essay, Labor and Hendricks contrast London's two versions of “To Build a Fire,” concluding that the first is “a well-made boys' story; the second version is a classic for all ages.”
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Critical Essay by Joan D. Hedrick
3,173 words, approx. 11 pages
 In the following essay, Hedrick compares London's “The White Silence,” “In a Far Country,” and “To Build a Fire.”
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Critical Essay by Joan D. Hedrick
3,173 words, approx. 11 pages
 In the following essay, Hedrick compares London's “The White Silence,” “In a Far Country,” and “To Build a Fire.”
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Critical Essay by Charles E. May
2,703 words, approx. 9 pages
 In the following essay, May questions the critical perceptions of “To Build a Fire” as a metaphysical fiction.
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Critical Essay by Charles E. May
2,703 words, approx. 9 pages
 In the following essay, May questions the critical perceptions of “To Build a Fire” as a metaphysical fiction.
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Critical Essay by Nancy Clasby
2,151 words, approx. 7 pages
 In the following essay, Clasby maintains that in “To Build a Fire” London's “unquestioned myth-making ability has produced an extreme expression of a common archetype.”
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Critical Essay by Nancy Clasby
2,151 words, approx. 7 pages
 In the following essay, Clasby maintains that in “To Build a Fire” London's “unquestioned myth-making ability has produced an extreme expression of a common archetype.”
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Critical Essay by James K. Bowen
1,164 words, approx. 4 pages
 In the following essay, Bowen delineates some critical misconceptions associated with “To Build a Fire.”
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Critical Essay by James K. Bowen
1,164 words, approx. 4 pages
 In the following essay, Bowen delineates some critical misconceptions associated with “To Build a Fire.”

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