The L.A. Times runs this excerpt from Anthony Arthur's new afterword to The Jungle on the occasion of its centenary.
In May 1903, the ambitious 24-year-old novelist Upton Sinclair feared that he was a failure, "a would-be singer and penniless rat." Less than three years later, almost immediately after the publication of "The Jungle" on Feb. 26, 1906, his renown was so widespread that the New York Evening World marveled: "Not since Byron awoke one morning to find himself famous has there been such an example of world-wide celebrity won in a day by a book as has come to Upton Sinclair." Sinclair's name and his novel are familiar after a hundred years, long after competing bestsellers have turned to dust. And yet even admirers must concede that "The Jungle," though still a powerful exposé of worker exploitation by the Chicago beef trust, is something less than a work of perfect art: one part melodrama, one part propaganda and one part compelling literary achievement.
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