Product Description
This book was converted from its physical edition to the digital format by a community of volunteers. You may find it for free on the web. Purchase of the Kindle edition includes wireless delivery…. More >>
The Jungle Book
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#1 by Claudia C. Perry on May 29, 2010 - 10:14 am
This book is great! If you are looking for the Disney version of the book ,you won’t find it here, but this is alot better!
Rating: 5 / 5
#2 by Anonymous on May 29, 2010 - 11:16 am
kipling is great of course, but part of the story is missing, the chapters run together, and there is no table of contents
Rating: 1 / 5
#3 by Robert Salita on May 29, 2010 - 11:41 am
The formatting on my Kindle 2 looks good. I am using the smallest font available. There is no Table of Contents and no jogability.
Rating: 5 / 5
#4 by Thornwell Simons on May 29, 2010 - 1:45 pm
This collection is probably the single best starting place for reading Kipling, especially for younger or teen readers (though the very youngest would probably enjoy his _Just So Stories_ more). These stories are great reads, enjoyable by all ages.
Fans of the movie will find a more complex work here — not “darker,” but more ambiguous; the three stories from this collection that have generally been adapted into other media, and that most readers think of when they think of “The Jungle Book”, focus on outcast human infant, Mowgli, who is abandoned as an infant in the jungle and raised by wolves, and primarily tell the story of his search for a “place” within the wolf pack, the Jungle, and the human world, and his outsider status in all three realms. Perhaps because they focus almost entirely on the Indian jungle, or perhaps because they’re aimed at children, these stories are also largely free of the undertone (overtone?) of imperialism that runs through much of Kipling’s work for adults.
It has, of course, been massively influential on later writers, from Edgar Rice Burrough’s _Tarzan_ to Neil Gaiman’s _The Graveyard Book_. The various morals contained within the “Mowgli” stories were also taken as a motivational book within the Scouting movement (reading this helped me understand why I had to memorize “Akela” when I was a cub scout).
While only three stories in this collection focus on Mowgli, Kipling did write a second collection, “The Second Jungle Book,” which is almost entirely comprised of Mowgli stories, and which I would highly recommend if you like these tales. If you want to read more of Kipling’s work for adults, I’d recommend either “The Man Who Would be King” or the short story collection “Plain Tales from the Hills,” both of which should be available for free online.
As to formatting of this kindle edition: there are blocks of Kipling’s poetry in between the stories, some of which was difficult to read as the formatting had not carried over well to this Kindle edition. Not a critical issue, but Kipling’s poetry is excellent and the formatting errors were annoying.
Rating: 5 / 5
#5 by Joyful Reader and Listener on May 29, 2010 - 4:00 pm
You will be sold on Kipling. And you may never settle for the movie afterwards; Jungle Book lives and breaths on its own.
Rating: 5 / 5