The 10 Best Books Similar to The Jungle to Read Now
If you were captivated by Upton Sinclair's raw exposé of the meat-packing industry, you'll love these powerful books that dive into labor exploitation and corporate greed. From early-1900s muckraking classics to modern investigations, each pick pulls no punches and mirrors the urgency of The Jungle.

The Jungle
Editor's Top Match
The Octopus
by Frank Norris
Why it's the perfect match
Captures the exact same thematic depth and pacing that made "The Jungle" a masterpiece.
The Full Curated Collection
10 Deep Selections

The Grapes of Wrath
by John Steinbeck

The Financier
by Theodore Dreiser
Dreiser's novel follows a ruthless businessman climbing the financial ladder, exposing the cutthroat capitalism that mirrors the exploitation at the heart of The Jungle.

The Iron Heel
by Jack London
London's dystopian vision of a future corporate tyranny preys on workers and foreshadows the oppressive industrial conditions depicted in The Jungle.
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The Road to Wigan Pier
by George Orwell
Orwell's investigative narrative shines a stark light on British coal miners and factory hands, sharing The Jungle's urgency for labor rights.

The Ragged Trousered Philanthropist
by Robert Tressell
Tressell's expose of underpaid construction workers in England is a vivid, angry portrait of class oppression, reminiscent of Sinclair's crusade.

The Nickel and the Dimed
by Barbara Ehrenreich
Ehrenreich's undercover experiment in low-wage America offers a modern, eye-opening parallel to the grueling labor realities in The Jungle.

The White Tiger
by Aravind Adiga
Adiga's novel about an Indian driver striving to escape the caste-based labor hierarchy captures the desperate struggle for dignity found in The Jungle.

The Meat Racket
by Christopher Leonard
Leonard's deep dive into the modern meat-packing industry uncovers the same ruthless practices and worker exploitation that Sinclair first exposed.

The Working Poor
by David K. Shipler
Shipler's nonfiction portrait of America's working poor highlights relentless toil and systemic injustice, echoing the relentless critique of The Jungle.
Slightly different vibe?
Explore adjacent cultural paths branching off from "The Jungle".
