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I also question why he seemingly wasn't fishing more. I still have mixed feelings about this guy. I saw the movie first and just knew I had to read the book. I recommend this book, but I am always drawn to non-fiction. I envy his nerve but he was too smart to have been so ill-prepared. Maybe he was a little arrogant and spoiled. I like the way the author adds his own experiences as well as those of other similar characters. It's a very good read.
I really enjoyed the book. The book covers a little more than the movie covered and goes into other discussions about adventures into the Alaskan wilderness. I don't know which one I liked better, but I have watched and read both versions of this story over and over. You won't be disappointed.
A literary genius, Krakauer engages the reader so well that one puts it down still wallowing in the emotions of the main character, Christopher McCandless. A true story which begun from a journalist's work, Krakauer draws parallels between his obsession with the McCandless and his own life - where he was always seeking the next adventure, the next high. This book will absolutely connect you to the life of Christopher McCandless, who was simply a boy who challenged the rules in search of a life worth meaning.
The author is able to do this so well because he readily admits he strongly relates to the main character. A very good book that shed light on an incident of which I had only heard rumor and hearsay. Like many men who have survived their 20's, I was able to relate to McCandless as well- the determination, the recklessness, the need to forge one's own path, all sadly coupled with a lack of wisdom. Krakauer did an outstanding job researching and retracing McCandless' odyssey, through his tragic demise. Krakauer also keeps the book from devolving into a documentary by trying to dig into McCandless's mind and extrapolate what his thoughts might have been. Had McCandless not made those seemingly small but crucial mistakes at the end, he would have succeeded by relying on that same youthful grit and determination (& stubbornness) that served him so well for two years, but which ultimately led to his downfall. Then perhaps he could have written his own memoir about a man who had the courage to live life the way he chose & took the road less traveled.
With only one real point being proven throughout these 203 pages, Krakauer's message may as well be burned into the reader's forebrain not even mid-way into the book. And, oh yeah, after a few months, we find him dead." Now, could this man's life story possibly be given any dignity, told without any implications of insanity.Well, it would appear Jon Krakauer has managed to do just that.While Christopher Johnson McCandless (or Alexander Supertramp--ahem, let "changed his name to sever ties with his family and earlier life" be added to his list of accomplishments) would likely be regarded by most as another of the cocky young men for whom hubris beckoned death, Into the Wild was a study into his mind, uncovering what complex motives drove him to take his fatal journey into the tundra. Yeah, that is one thing. But everyone else.if you've an open mind, why not give it a try.
Yeah. But it's not for everyone--those who have already set their minds that I shouldn't even be recognising McCandless's chosen name in this review: you won't appreciate this book, if what you're seeking is a literary masterpiece. Reflecting the often deeply buried journeyman inside us all, this novel spun the tale of McCandless's life prior to his adventures; a life of academic excellence, parental skirmishes, bonding with pets; a life we can all too often relate to. But exactly what Krakauer did was to humanize this outdoorsy-magazine feature story, causing it to become more than a figure at which to poke fun. This is after doing away with $25,000, by the way.
Simply put, we're given the ability to peer into McCandless/Supertramp's most intimate thoughts, but it still feels.distant, irrelevant.Though at least we can peer into those most intimate thoughts. And this is where Krakauer excels. We might understand what Krakauer's trying to say, but we're not pushed to agree. Through this lens, we begin to understand Krakauer's argument: that while most men, us included, share wild, fantastical ideals as McCandless's (or should I say Supertramp's), few have the guts to live them out; that he wasn't juvenile; he was noble.Am I beginning to sound redundant. Because, truth be told, as fascinating as this one point is, I'm not sure any of us need to have it driven in a handful of times every chapter.
For a theme suggested to be as universally applicable as this, surfacing from the covers will not bring more than a whim of inspiration. "So, there's this guy, and he decides to prance out into the uncivilised Alaskan bush, without even a compass. In examining not only McCandless/Supertramp's Alaskan odyssey, but also his childhood, school, and college life, we really do wind up understanding how his head works. It's like we've suddenly acquired an astounding amount of psychological insight and he's sitting in front of us, pouring out his thoughts, allowing us to read him like.an open book.
Into the Wild is that book.If you open it.Though it is laden with much of the same horrific fascination that compels so many of us to "rubberneck" at multi-car-pileups on highways, I can't Into the Wild, really. I mean, it's great. It's something to pick p and flick through, to find some amazing excerpts but not necessarily devour cover to cover.
And no, delusions of invincibility were not included in these.Coherent within a world where adolescents all too often play the daredevil, what with their propensity for tackle sports, heroin, and anarchism, it is all too easy to dismiss McCandless as another distressed youth lacking responsibility (not to mention rationality). It's absorbing to a point, but less for those who want to introduce themselves to this sort of mindset than for those who already feel some degree of understanding with McCandless/Supertramp.But then, that category could include more people than you'd think. I mean, sure, there are so many cases that work marvellously as evidence, but by the end what with all the repetition throughout, the book feels a tad dissatisfying, owing mainly to the fact that the reader doesn't feel like they've gotten anything out of it, not when all the "fresh" substance sort of begins its decline after the fourth chapter.And it's not only due to a lack of variety in material that this insubstantial feeling arises from Into the Wild.
Sure, the novel was argumentative, and sure, it drew on our emotions, causing us to relate, but unfortunately Krakauer seems to have decided not to take his work just one step further, not including any passages that might cause us to alter our perspectives on life. Those with borderline ADHD: you won't appreciate it at all, either. Because, let's face it, as Krakauer proves many times over, who hasn't at some point considered just.striding.into.the.wild.
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