Preview

into the wild

Good Essays
Open Document
Open Document
543 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
into the wild
Summary

Outside Fairbanks, Alaska, a truck driver stops for a hitchhiker who introduces himself as Alex (though his real name is Christopher Johnson McCandless). The hitchhiker says he is from South Dakota and requests a ride to Denali National Park. He then tells the driver, an electrician named Jim Gallien, that he wants to "walk deep into the bush and 'live off the land for a few months.'"

At first Gallien thinks McCandless is "another delusional visitor to the Alaskan frontier." But during their two-hour drive north, Gallien changes his opinion and comes to regard the young man as intelligent and thoughtful. Gallien recognizes, however, that McCandless lacks the basic necessities for surviving in the Alaskan bush: he has no food except for a 10-pound bag of rice, his hiking boots are not waterproof, and his rifle is too small for the large game he will have to kill in order to survive. Other essentials that McCandless lacks include an ax, snowshoes, and a compass.

McCandless plans on following the Stampede Trail, an often unmarked route in the wilderness north of Mount McKinley. Gallien tries to talk him out of this, but the young man is undeterred, claiming there isn't anything that he can't deal with on his own. On Tuesday, April 28, 1992, "Alex" (McCandless) disappears down the Stampede Trail.

Analysis

Into the Wild begins not with the birth of its main character, or even with the beginning of the journey that the book will trace, but with an important turning point late in Christopher McCandless's trip through the American West: his final encounter with another human before he enters the Alaskan wilderness. The epic poems the Iliad and the Odyssey both start similarly, employing a technique the ancients called beginning in medias res — "in the middle of things." Though Into the Wild is a nonfiction book (that is, a true story), Jon Krakauer's choice to start it in this fashion encourages the reader to connect Christopher McCandless's

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Powerful Essays

    The beginning of the story shows McCandless’ arrival in Alaska. There, he found an abandoned bus that he called as “The Magic Bus”, which, then, he used as shelter. He spent most of his time by animal hunting, reading books and writinghis journey documentary.…

    • 4355 Words
    • 18 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    “In his state of hunger, McCandless simply made the mistake of ingesting its seed pods. A person with a better grasp of botanical principles would probably not have eaten them but it was an incorrect error. It was however sufficient to do him in.”(Krakauer, Jon. Into the Wild. New York: Doubleday, 1996.) If he was prepared to with his Geological survey topographical map he would have seen the cabins were only about six miles away and he may have been able to reach this destination where emergency food and shelter would have been…

    • 1482 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Good Essays

    After he came up dead and his story popped up in the newspaper many people gave their opinion on his decisions. One of the harshest of them said, “amounts of disrespect to the land… just another case of underprepared, over confident men bumbling around out there and screwing up because they lacked the requisite humility” (51). Most of these came from Alaskans who know how harsh the land could be but John Krakauer the author of the book Into The Wild believed otherwise. McCandless wasn’t crazy for what he did, he was just unfamiliar with the area but if he was crazy he wouldn’t have lasted in the wilderness as long as he did. (59)…

    • 613 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    McCandless the main character “Into The Wild” is a reckless and selfish human being. In the novel it states that “his family had no idea where he was or what had become of him until his remains turned up in Alaska.” He made his parents suffer not knowing where their son was at. Chris McCandless actions was clearly a sign of stupidity almost suicidal. He had chances to survive and turn this around. His first mistake…

    • 513 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Depending on who you might ask, Chris McCandless was a searcher of life’s meaning, or he is nothing more than some unprepared nut that suffered a deserving fate in the Alaskan wilderness.. Those people don’t stop to think about him, they brush him off as an ordinary hitchhiker and think nothing more. Krakauer explains McCandless’s whole journey as well as who he was before the trip. I can see now that Chris McCandless is anything but a nut; he was a dreamer and wished to see what the world had to offer him. McCandless, if anything, is odd and Krakauer states it best that he could be a pilgrim (60)…

    • 547 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    In Jon Krakauer's nonfiction book Into The Wild the main character is Chris McCandless a young man who is extremely smart and who seems to have everything going great in his life. There is only one thing, McCandless is a man that is missing something, in my opinion he was given everything he wanted except one thing that is extremely hard to find a raw experience of life. By that I mean a crude, adventure through the middle of the country with nothing except a backpack experience. Through this novel Krakauer gives an inside look on McCandless's adventure through the Denali Trail, giving us great details on his life, his influences and how he puts that into how he lives and travels. In the novel, Krakauer also uses epigraph's in the beginning of every chapter to show a little of foreshadowing of what the chapter will be influenced by and McCandless's influence of those words in that chapter.…

    • 956 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    F. Scott Fitzgerald once wrote “With people like us our home is where we are not … No one person is necessary to you or me,” (This Side of Paradise). This quote describes how some people can become consumed with a feeling called wanderlust, or the overwhelming feeling of needing to travel to new places. In his nonfiction book “Into The Wild” (1996), Jon Krakauer constructs Chris McCandless’ character into that of an wanderlusting alter ego. Krakauer completes this idea by implying throughout chapter three that Chris McCandless was idealistic with his nonconformist philosophy, unprepared for hardships before he disappeared, and by indicating McCandless had a secret sociopathic nature. He illustrates rhetorical devices in order to give insight into why McCandless’ death was important, and to crucially build his character. Krakauer aims his book towards an audience who is interested in exploring or adventuring, or anyone McCandless-esque who may aspire to pull off a stunt like lone traveling to Alaska with no money or supplies.…

    • 586 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Return To The Wild

    • 560 Words
    • 3 Pages

    The documentary Return to the Wild debates the two very different argued reasons of why Chris McCandless went into the wild. The writers choose to uncover the dark secrets of the McCandless family and to reveal the truth as to why Chris travelled into the Alaskan wilderness. The documentary adopts an intense tone in the beginning that shifts to a more light hearted attitude throughout the second half of the film using symbolism, cinematography, audio, and various interviews in order to explain to the viewers the grim childhood McCandless experienced and events that led him into the barren wilderness of Alaska.…

    • 560 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Christopher McCandless was a young college graduate, who gave up everything to go live in the wild. Many people believe that McCandless was crazy and ignorant, others like Jon Krakauer, the author of Into the Wild believe otherwise. I agree with the author that Christopher McCandless wasn't a crazy, a sociopath, or an outcast, because he got along with many people very well, but he did seem somewhat incompetent, even though he survived for a long period of time.…

    • 553 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Into the Wild

    • 348 Words
    • 2 Pages

    Novelist Jon Krakauer, in his novel, "Into the Wild," examines Chris McCandless's life from all perspectives. Krakauer's purpose is to explore Chris in terms of his own reasoning. He adopts a serious tone in order to convey the characters actions to the readers.…

    • 348 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    into the wild

    • 828 Words
    • 3 Pages

    Into the Wild tells the story of a Emory University graduate, Christopher McCandless, who leaves his middle class life in "pursuit of freedom from relationships and obligation" (Anderson-Urriola). On this journey, he gives up his home, family, all possessions but the few he carries on his back. He donates, what would've been his Harvard Law School tuition ($24,000) to charity and embarks on the search to find himself. McCandless embodies a true transcendentalist throughout his journey.…

    • 828 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    The Mccandless Journey

    • 910 Words
    • 4 Pages

    McCandless goal was not to get help from anyone during his journey across the United States, to Alaska. However, he did end up getting help from different individuals during his journey. For example, in the book “Into The Wild,” In the beginning of his journey, McCandless was offered help from Jim Gallien, a union electrician who offered a ride to Alex and offered to drop him off wherever he wanted. In which Alex accepted. Gallien asked then went to ask Alex if he had a hunting license since he McCandless was carrying a .22 rifle, in which McCandless responded “Hell no, Alex replied, “How I feed myself is none of the government’s business. Fuck their stupid rules.” This quote goes back to…

    • 910 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Into the Wild

    • 1109 Words
    • 5 Pages

    In the novel "Into the Wild," written by Jon Krakauer, Chris McCandless, the main protagonist, part of a an upper-middle class family embarks on a spiritual journey into the wild,literally, without the basic so-called luxuries and problems he faces in his old life. Although some may view this journey as a naive teenager rebelling against norms, it is so much more than that if you look deeper into Chris' morals and personality. Chris meets people, animals, and scenery that reinvent his mind and perspective each day. The struggles and triumphs he goes through better his state of mind and revoke the reason to which why he left in the first place.…

    • 1109 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Into the Wild

    • 1095 Words
    • 5 Pages

    To Chris McCandless and many others of his ilk like Henry Thoreau and Jack London,the wilderness of the west has a very specific allure. McCandless sees the wilderness as a purer state, a place free of the evils of modern society, where someone like him can find out what he is really made of, live by his own rules, and be completely free. Yet, it is also true that the reality of day-to-day living in the wilderness is not as romantic as he and others like him imagine it to be. Perhaps this explains why many of his heroes who wrote about the wilderness, for example, Jack London, never actually spent much time living in it.…

    • 1095 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Into The Woods

    • 694 Words
    • 2 Pages

    Before Grimm, before Supernatural, and even before Wicked, there was one “reimagining of classic fairy tales with interwoven plots and grey scale characters” and that was Into the Woods by Stephen Sondheim. Sondheim uses four familiar stories to set the scene for his overarching plot allowing him to concentrate on jokes and creating new relationships between old characters. He also uses familiar characters in ways that blend categories. Through much of act one every character is stock through and through, yet by the end of the play our dashing prince charming has become an unapologetic adulterer, and the wicked old witch becomes an anti-hero. In addition to plot and character Sondheim pays special attention to his musical numbers; just from the first number we understand the characters relationships to one another, their motivations (having children, going to the festival, visiting grandma, and not starving), and we’re introduced to the play’s key metaphor: the woods. While these aspects were vital to the performances success I will be concentrating on the diction and acting.…

    • 694 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays