Plot & Setting
Character
Theme & Symbols
Literary Elements
Historical Context & Author's Craft
100

Buck lives here at the beginning of the novel.

What is at Judge Miller's estate in Santa Clara Valley, California?

100

Buck's original owner.

Who is Judge Miller?

100

The Call of the Wild symbolizes

What is Buck's instinctual pull toward his primitive, natural self.

100

The point-of-view of the novel

What is third-person limited?

100

He wrote The Call of the Wild.

What is Jack London?

200

How Buck ends up in the Yukon.

What is he is stolen by a gardener's helper and sold into the sled-dog trade.

200
The human who treats Buck with genuine kindness.

Who is John Thornton?

200

The novel explores the theme of survival of the fittest

Through the brutal environment, only the strongest and most adaptable survive.

200

Identify one example of foreshadowing in the Call of the Wild.

What is Buck's dreams of primitive man foreshadow his final transformation into a wild creature?

200

The historical period in the novel is set.

What is the Klondike Gold Rush of the 1890s?

300

The main purpose of the Yukon gold rush setting.

What is it provides a harsh  environment that tests Buck's instincts and accelerates his transformation?

300

Spitz is different from Buck in the following ways.

What is Spitz is cruel, cunning and ruthless, while Buck grows into a fair but dominant leader?

300

Buck's final run into the forest represents.

What is his complete acceptance of his wild instincts and freedom from human control?

300

This is personified throughout the story and the reason is.

What is nature and instinct are personified to show their power and spiritual presence in Buck's journey?

300

The real-life experiences inspired Jack London to write the novel is

What is his time in the Yukon during the Klondike Gold Rush, observing sled dogs and frontier life?

400

John Thornton dies by the hands of

What is a group of Yeehat Indians?

400

The lesson that Buck learns from the man in the red sweater is

What is he learns the law of the club and fang - that man with a club is to be obeyed?

400

London uses nature to comment on civilization

What is nature is depicted as pure and honest compared to the corruption and cruelty of human civilization?

400

London uses imagery to describe the wilderness.

What is vivid sensory descriptions create a sense of danger, beauty, and harshness in the northern landscape?

400

London uses the naturalism shape the novel's message by

What is it emphasizes that behavior and fate are determined by environment, instinct, and survival forces?

500

Describes Buck's transformation from the start to the end of the novel.

What is Buck evolves from a domesticated pet into a fierce, independent leader who answers the call of the wild and joins a wolf pack?

500

Explain the relationship between Buck and John Thornton.

What is they share mutual love and respect; John Thornton's kindness represents the last tie Buck has to humanity.

500

Explain how Buck's transformation symbolizes the conflict between civilization and the wild.

What it reflects the tension between man-made order and the natural instinct within all creatures?

500

Identify one motif that appears throughout the novel and explain its significance.

What is a motif of dreams and ancestral memories; symbolizes Buck's deep connection to his primitive past?

500

The Call of the Wild critique human greed during the Gold Rush era.

What is through the suffering of dogs and men obsessed with wealth, London exposes the moral decay and brutality caused by greed and materialism?