Top-Rated Free Essay
Preview

The Chris McCandless Story: The Author’s Perspective

Good Essays
1055 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
The Chris McCandless Story: The Author’s Perspective
English II H, Section 1
27 February 2014
The Chris McCandless Story: The Author’s Perspective Christopher Johnson McCandless was an American hiker who adopted the alias Alexander Supertramp and ventured into the Alaskan wilderness in April 1992 with little food and equipment, hoping to live simply for a time in solitude. Little did his family and friends know, but when Chris stepped into the Alaskan wilderness, he would never come out alive. Jon Krakauer documents Chris’s journey and the people he met on the way to his final destination. He struggled throughout his chronicling of Chris’s life to determine what drove Chris to leave his family and friends and go into the wild. Krakauer interrupted McCandless’ story with fragments of a narrative drawn from his own youth and experiences because he knew he could help the reader better understand the reasons why Chris went into the wild. Jon Krakauer interrupted his documentation of Chris McCandless’s life with a story from his own past because he understood Chris’s reasons to go into the wild because of their common personality traits. In their obsessions to go out and prove themselves, to survive extreme conditions and to live through the life-or-death situations they encounter for the reward of a rush of adrenaline, both the author and his subject show themselves to be extremely independent, impulsive, and ambitious. In the author's words, they had "a similar intensity, a similar heedlessness, a similar agitation of the soul" (155). One of the reasons for both men's aptitude to follow through with their spontaneous plans seems to be that each one is bent on proving something – either to themselves or to those around them. At one point, Krakauer mentions that "the thought of returning to Boulder in defeat wasn't very appealing" (146), a thought which seems to be one of his main motivators in the climb up Devil's Thumb. In a similar fashion, McCandless often refused help from people he met on the road, hoping to prove to himself that he was capable of surviving on his own. Admittedly, there are distinct differences between the two, and there is no telling what type of person McCandless would have ended up being in his later years had he survived longer. The similarities in their lives and relationships make it easy for Krakauer to understand Chris to some extent, and he is trying to use his knowledge of Chris to better explain the reasons why Chris went into the wild. By having another perspective of a person who had experienced similar situations and feelings to Chris, Krakauer helps the reader make better guesses about Chris’s decision to leave society and live deep in the Alaskan wilderness. This is because he can relate to the similar struggles Chris went through, for example, their struggle with their fathers, and they both went into dangerous situations in the wild. This is important because Kraukauer would have insight into the motives and ideas Chris had when going into the wild. Krakauer may have also included the story from his youth to help the reader understand why Chris went into the wild because of their similar adventures. Both men went into the wild, risking their lives and rebelling against their families, especially their fathers. Despite their similar motivations to go, only one survived. The failure of Chris's journey seems to stem from the youth's inability to accept less than what he deems as complete success, rather than a lack of supplies or knowledge. In comparison, Kraukauer proceeded on his journey with a reasonable amount of supplies, but possessed no knowledge of the northern face of the Devil's Thumb since no one had ever climbed it (134). The only reason Jon was able to walk out alive from his journey is that he was able to accept a different form of the victory he desired. By climbing the southern side of the Devil's Thumb, Kraukauer allows himself the joy of reaching the peak, while still understanding his mortality and limitations that hindered his northern failure. Chris was unable to deviate in such a way, causing one of the major shortcomings of his ill-fated Odyssey. Both young men had been arrogant and did not think out their plans out properly. This was made clear about Krakauer when he stated, “as I formulated my plan to climb the thumb, I was dimly aware that I might be getting in over my head. But that only added to the scheme’s appeal. That it wouldn’t be easy was the entire point” (135). Chris shared this mindset, choosing to go to Alaska, one of the hardest places to survive in America. Although full of resources, Alaska is spread out, and it would take days to find another human in the unforgiving woods. Krakauer wanted to help shed light on the reasons why Chris went into the wild. As a result of the striking resemblances to their stories, Krakauer may have been very similar to Chris as a young man, thus perhaps knowing what Chris was thinking when he isolated himself from the rest of the world. Krakauer interrupted McCandless’ story with fragments of a narrative drawn from his own youth and experiences because he knew he could help the reader better understand the reasons why Chris went into the wild; they had similar personality traits and Jon Krakauer had gone on a journey similar to Chris’s. Despite their many similarities, there is one key difference: Jon Krakauer survived his adventure whereas Chris did not. Sadly, Christopher McCandless went into the wild to discover that “happiness is only real when shared”(189), something he found out far too late. He went all that way to discover that something is only really worth experiencing if you can share it with someone else. Chris McCandless wanted to know what it was like to live off the land in the wilderness, choosing to go with only ten pounds of rice, a rifle and a book on wild plants. He found out what it was like to live in the wilderness, lonely and hard. He had an arrogant vision of himself as someone who could survive with barely anything but the clothes on his back. He wanted to explore the unexplored and discover a life without responsibility, possessions, people, or money but in doing so, he went to his death.

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Good Essays

    Chris McCandless was a very bright man. He knew exactly what he was doing and he enjoyed it. The only thing he did wrong was underestimating the Alaskan Wilderness. “ That’s when I had a bad feeling like we wouldn’t never see Alex again.” He was very driven and believed he can accomplish anything, which is very admirable. “ Same story: idealistic, energetic guys who overestimate themselves, underestimate the country.” –Jack London, one of Chris’s favorite authors.…

    • 361 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Finally in Chapter 8, the reader is given insight into the types of letters Krakauer received, after having previously written an article about McCandless, with most of the incoming mail giving harsh criticism on the young traveler's story for being mentally ill, and unprepared. Yet McCandless isn’t the only one to go off on to a far fetched adventure out into the Alaskan wilderness, as one school teacher put it, with Krakauer offering three other examples of others with stories like McCandless. These other stories of Rosellini, Waterman, and McCunn, also prove Christopher McCandless’s uniqueness despite there being similarities between him and of the many others who shared the same philosophy as McCandless. Different in a sense that McCandless,…

    • 144 Words
    • 1 Page
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    In the book, “Into the Wild” by Christopher McCandless's, is a true story about a young man name Emory who was found dead in the Alaskan wilderness in September 1992. Anyhow, McCandless is a senior at Emory. He has driven away most of his friends, and barely keeps in touch with his parents. He lets his parents think that he is interested in law school, but instead, after graduating with honors, he donates his $25,000 savings to charity, gets in his car, and drives away without telling anyone where he is going, abandoning the use of his real name along the way. His plan was to get away from city life, to be with nature. Shaun Callarman said that “I think that Chris McCandless was bright and ignorant at the same time. He had no common sense, and he had no business going into Alaska with his Romantic silliness. He made a lot of mistakes based on…

    • 581 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    The book presents the development of a psychological portrait of Christopher McCandless who abandoned all of his possessions and hitchhiked to Alaska.…

    • 70 Words
    • 1 Page
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    In the book Into the Wild it explains a true story that had changed the the lives of many. A young man who all he wanted was to escape society and get away from the world. His life did end shortly after his disappearance. But that does not mean he did not live his life to the fullest. Jon Krakauer the author of the book Into the Wild describes Chris McCandless faults and traits. Chris is an intelligent guy but he finds a new meaning for life and wants to go discover it. He didn't have any contact with his parents but was contacting his sister carrie. Krakauer does a tremendous job of interviewing everyone who had anything to do with McCandless from his parents, when he grew up, to the people who found his body in the abandoned bus in Alaska.…

    • 286 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    Christopher McCandless or Alexander Supertramp should be admired for his courage and noble idea to drop everything and go into the wild, with nothing but a backpack and in it was a book of Tolstoy, a book about native plants and berries, a .22 rifle with 400 rounds of ammunition, a writing implement, a journal, a camera, a 10 pound bag of rice, a small cooking utensil, matches, a knife, and some fishing twine and a hook, and the few clothes he had on his back. Chris was trying to find himself by leaving everything behind, yes Chris might have been a little reckless but you have to be a little reckless to go into the wild and hitchhike around the world. This quote support that's chris was just living and trying to find himself was, “...McCandless pitched his tent in the puny shade of a tamarick and basked in his newfound freedom. (Krakauer 27)” this is saying that McCandless was happy to finally be by himself and start life in the wild,…

    • 469 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Kathryn Foiland, a young girl raised in Durango Colorado, had a love with nature that grew ever since she was little. She admired animals and the liberated habitats they are granted with. Her childhood diary reveals that she longed for an “escape” from the city, so she left the house at age 19. She lied to her parents and said she was going on a camping trip as she biked off for a new and carefree life in the wild. 18 years later, Foiland was found dead by a local tribe on the edge of Colombia.…

    • 443 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Chris McCandless’s purpose and meaning in life was to find and reach his purpose in…

    • 799 Words
    • 1 Page
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    In 1992 a man began his four month journey of leaving everything behind, college, family, and all his relationships to start a completely new life in the wild. In the book The Wild by Jon Krakauer, Chris McCandless recreates a new life for himself. while following his long journey, Chris renamed himself Alexander Supertramp and met many people along the way like Gallion, Franz, and Westerberg. Although some people think that Chris’s death has purpose, really Chris died in vain, alone in the woods.Chris proves this when he risks his life countless times and gets repeatedly questioned for it by friends along his trip. Chris wasted his time in the woods and could have lived if he listened to the people around him who were trying to help him.…

    • 761 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    “I blame everyone but me. What I thought what was watching out for me was actually a razor blade wrapped around my wrist. Time wasn't on my side, it didn't have my back when confronted with my pride. Does it lead to the fall” (Brian Braille Winchester). In today’s world we do things without thinking of the people we might hurt, or the consequences that our decisions might lead to. After reading Into the Wild, I think that Christopher McCandless was Inconsiderate.…

    • 395 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    The book “Into the Wild” by Jon Krakauer talks about an adventurous young man that travels into the Alaskan wilderness pursuing the right lifestyle for himself. Chris McCandless was a modern day nomad from the 20th century looking for a way to live a free life. Chris found out that his father never divorced his first wife causing an impact on his life that helps with his decision to live a nomadic life. Chris is very intelligent young man but at the same time an arrogant one too who has taken on a path to travel to the Alaska and live the free life that he desires.…

    • 780 Words
    • 4 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

    Despite the conflicting public opinion, Chris McCandless succeeded in his goal to survive in the wilderness and taught the world valuable lessons in the process. Chris McCandless “probably died on August 18th, 112 days after he had walked into the wild.” (119, Krakauer) He survived with very little gear and food, even though he was essentially cut off from the world. To have lived for a little over three months totally self-sufficient is impressive. Chris’s goal was to be independent and live off the land for a while. In his mindset, he achieved in his goal. Wayne Westerberg had employed Chris for two short amounts of time, but said “He was the type of person who insisted on living out his beliefs.” (Krakauer, 67) This was why Chris was determined to go to Alaska, instead of listening to the protests of others.…

    • 509 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    The 2007 Film Into the Wild tells the story of Chris McCandless, an unsatisfied college graduate who leaves his family and promising future behind to live a life of isolation in the Alaskan wilderness. While John Krakauer’s essay “Death of an Innocent” portrays Chris is an extremely heroic light by likening him to “a monk gone to God,” Into the Wild leaves much more room for debate by presenting Chris as selfish and detached. Chris, however, is not the only character whose actions can be interpreted as heroic or not. The peripheral female characters also act in ways that put themselves at risk. While the female characters take personal risks to fulfill their need for relationships, Chris takes selfishly motivated physical chances, ultimately disregarding all human relationships; this binary begs the question then of which is more heroic—truly caring about people and empathizing? Or being independent and avoiding emotional engagement?…

    • 2190 Words
    • 9 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    Krakauer wrote, "no one was affected more powerfully by his or her brief contact with the boy than Ronald Franz"(Krakauer 48). My life and values have been influenced by relationships with others just like Ronald Franz was greatly impacted by Chris McCandless. Many of the relationships that I have been involved with have changed what I value in a relationship and ultimately what I value in my life. Different relationships have opened me up to several different perspectives and different lights, which I am so grateful for. It is inevitable that out of all the relationships that I have made there are negative and positive aspects of each relationship, which I learned from and each of these relationships are blessings. Every relationship is crucial…

    • 134 Words
    • 1 Page
    Satisfactory Essays