THE JUNGLE
This novel, first published in 1906, caused an international sensation. It was the best selling book in the United States for a year; also in Great Britain and its colonies. It was translated into seventeen languages, and caused an investigation by President Roosevelt, and action by Congress. The book has been out of print for ten years, and is now reprinted by the author at a lower price than when first published, although the cost of manufacture has since more than doubled.
"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."—New York Evening World.
"It is a book that does for modern industrial slavery what 'Uncle Tom's Cabin' did for black slavery. But the work is done far better and more accurately in 'The Jungle' than in 'Uncle Tom's Cabin.'"—Arthur Brisbane, in the New York Evening Journal.
KING COAL
A novel of the Colorado coal country.
"Clear, convincing, complete."—Lincoln Steffens.
"I wish that every word of it could be burned deep into the heart of every American."—Adolph Germer.
Debs and the Poets: Edited by Ruth Le Prade, with an introduction by Upton Sinclair. A collection of poetry about Debs.
Sylvia: A novel of the South.