Jack London’s the Valley of the Moon
Jack London’s the Valley of the Moon In 1913, Jack London was the most famous and highest-paid writer in America. While he was known for his tales of survival in the frozen North, he was privately obsessed with a different kind of survival: the preservation of the laoʻnd and the human spirit through farming. The Valley of the Moon was his manifesto for this new way of life. Below is the expanded story of the novel, the real-life locations that inspired it, and London's deep connection to his home in Glen Ellen. The Road to Redemption: A Summary of the Journey The novel follows Billy and Saxon Roberts as they flee the "man-trap" of industrial Oakland. Their departure isn't just a vacation; it is a desperate search for a "piece of the earth" where they can be free. Their journey takes them through a vivid map of early 20th-century California: The Artist Colony at Carmel: Before finding their farm, the couple spends time in Carmel-by-the-Sea. Lond...