Imagine someone you love walking off into the woods and never seeing them again. The book, Into The Wild by Jon Krakauer tells the fatal tale of a young man by the name of Christopher McCandless and the time he walked into the woods. Krakauer writes about the adventure Christopher McCandless was on in the final months of his life leading up to his death in the Alaskan Wilderness. Krakauer recounts; the places McCandless went, the things he did, and the people he met along the way. Not only that, Krakauer also went back to those places and talked to the people that McCandless met and got their view on McCandless. A lot of people who read the story believe that McCandless was selfish by going on this adventure that ultimately cost him his life;
The non-fiction book, Into the Wild, by author Jon Krakauer, is the story of Christopher McCandless, a young Emory Graduate from a rather wealthy family, who is mysteriously found dead in the Alaskan wilderness in September 1992 at the age of 24. Krakauer retells significant events of McCandless leading up to his death. In Into the Wild, Krakauer uses many rhetorical devices in order to support his argument. Krakauer effectively manipulated the rhetorical devices of characterization, comparison, logos, and anecdotes to convince the audience that Chris was not particularly unusual and as insane that people perceived him to be.
The romantic notion of condemning society and leaving everything behind is one many have had, but next to none have carried out. While there are reasons for this, Christopher McCandless disregarded them and completed this surreal experience. John Krakauer’s book, Into the Wild, chronicled this journey from Virginia to Alaska. On this expedition McCandless touched many people’s lives, working odd-jobs and hitching rides. He eventually met his end while on his Alaskan odyssey, his most ambitious campaign. Many people think that he deserved this fate because of his disregard for the dangers of the Alaskan wilderness. However, Chris McCandless was independent and he did not care for fitting in. His happiness with his life was uncommon. He was
Little things in one’s childhood can affect them in the long run and affect the decisions you make. In the book, Into the Wild, the author Jon Krakauer, tries to make the valid point that Chris McCandless was a hero, a noble and inspirational character. In the book, Krakauer fails to persuade the reader into the belief of the role that Chris McCandless was a “hero.” Chris McCandless was the son of two wealthy parents, and had so much great things going for him with a chance to a good working job and great opportunities, but instead to pursue in those opportunities he decided to get rid of all his possessions, and give everything up, even his family, and went on the journey to Alaska.
Jon Krakauer’s Into the Wild, describes the adventure of Christopher McCandless, a young man that ventured into the wilderness of Alaska hoping to find himself and the meaning of life. He undergoes his dangerous journey because he was persuade by of writers like Henry D. Thoreau, who believe it is was best to get farther away from the mainstreams of life. McCandless’ wild adventure was supposed to lead him towards personal growth but instead resulted in his death caused by his unpreparedness towards the atrocity nature.
In April of 1992, a young man of the age of twenty-four, later determined to be Chris McCandless ' body, was discovered in an old Fairbanks bus in the Alaskan bush. Four years after his death, Jon Krakauer wrote a novel titled Into The Wild, the book traced McCandless 's journey around much of the United States, across the West side of Canada, and even down to the boarder of Mexico. Over the many years since his death, speculations have arisen about how death was brought upon him. Most believe starvation was the only reason, but with extensive research Jon Krakauer discovered another theory, that a substance in the seeds that Chris McCandless was ingesting was a contributing factor to his death. Even with this conclusion many around the world despise Chris for his being naive and unprepared when walking into the wild. While others believe he was brave for following his dreams and never letting anyone talk him out of his plans. Chris McCandless was an adventurer who was brave enough to never back down, but in the end his luck turned for the worst and was misfortunate enough to have ate the wrong type of food. McCandless was an inspiration and a lesson to people of all ages, that dreams aren 't meant to be taken lightly and even with possible risks they should be followed. Jon Krakauer 's book tells a marvelous story of a young man who left behind the outside world to do what he loved the most.
Selfish; the lack of consideration for others; obsessed with one’s personal profit or pleasure. Lots of people want the best life for themselves, others tend to give up chances that many would die for. In Jon Krakauer's Into The Wild, the theme of selfishness is explored. He causes damage and lost to his family, no connection with them for year, careless. Krakauer clearly mentions his wealth, a poor usage of opportunities. In the book, Chris demonstrates relationships that he has acted insensitive towards. McCandless is selfish because of his insensitivity towards others, the pain he causes to his family and the poor usage of his family's wealth.
All around us, nature envelops our world and gives society a constant thrill for adventure. The Alaskan wilderness has been described in John Muir’s journal as “a place that you should never go to as a young man because you’ll never be satisfied with any other place as long as you live”. Many people, such as a Chris McCandless take this as a test of their bravery and curiosity and venture out into the foreign lands only to die by their foolish decisions. Jon Krakauer’s Into the Wild portrays Chris McCandless as being unprepared, stubborn, and carefree that eventually lead to his death.
In the book “Into The Wild” by Jon Krakauer he writes about a young man named Christopher Mccandless. Chris had been found dead in Alaska by moose hunters from starvation. The book describes Chris’s life choices and events leading up to his death. Chris’s life choices and ignorant decisions had led up to his premature death in Alaska, April 1992.
Chris McCandless, the main character in Jon Krakauer’s Into the Wild, had troubles with his dad and wanted to leave society, so he donated most of his money and left his home to experience the wild. In Into the Wild, Jon Krakauer characterizes Christopher McCandless as self-reliant and unmaterialistic. Chris McCandless is self-reliant because he thought his instincts and intuition would guide him on his journey. Chris began his adventure after telling his parents he would “‘live off the and for a few months’” (Krakauer, 4).
Many people can agree that the chances one does not take will be regretted at the end. In the novel, Into the Wild, author John Krakauer describes Chris McCandless as he ventures into the Alaskan wilderness. Chris McCandless was the type of person that could be described in many ways. The main reason for his journey was to “prove to himself that he could make it on his own, without anybody else’s help”(159). Chris McCandless is a distinct character that takes chances without giving the importance of the consequences of his actions.
The story of a young man’s journey, told through interviews and acquired letters and journal entries, is interpreted and analyzed by Jon Krakauer in his novel Into the Wild. Chris McCandless, the combatant of his own story, embarks on an adventure around America after graduating from Emory University. When McCandless finds himself in the Alaskan wilderness with only a rifle, ten pounds of rice, a camera, and a few extra books and journals, he dies of starvation after a mere four months. In the novel, Krakauer successfully uses concrete diction to create complex sentences, apostrophes, and anecdotes to analyze the few interactions McCandless has leading up to his death and to drive the reader to question the role of an individual in society and if Chris McCandless deserves his eventual death.
In the novel “Into the Wild” by Jon Krakauer, Chris McCandless was a 24-year-old man who was caught in his own obsession. “Into the Wild” shows an idealist young man who goes off to Alaska, who then turns up dead after a few months. McCandless was a bright person, who had everything but then decided that he was playing it too safe. He decided that he was going to take a trip up north to Alaska, trying to live in the wild. After an article of McCandless’s death came out, people judged him, for his foolest rash decision. Krakauer, however, loved McCandless’s idea of trying to live in the wild and that’s why he wrote a book about it. In the novel, McCandless can be identified as a seeker and finder. People suspect Chris McCandless to be a seeker
“I understood what he was doing, that he had spent four years fulfilling the absurd and tedious duty of graduating from college and now he was emancipated from that world of abstraction, false security, parents, and material excess” (Krakauer __). Into the Wild by Jon Krakauer is a biography novel that follows Chris McCandless and his journey through the wilderness while finding himself along the way. Chris McCandless died in the August of 1992 after a four month journey through places like Mexico and Alaska. Krakauer investigates his actions and analyzes his identity after his death, trying to find meaning within his seemingly unnecessary expedition. Chris McCandless constructs his personal identity as a man who wanted to be challenged
Life is full of rules, and with every rule, there is a rule breaker. Chris McCandless was a prime example of someone who lived life on their own terms, someone who did not care for the opinions of others. After graduating college, McCandless chose to venture into the Alaskan wilderness with little supplies and little knowledge. Into the Wild by Jon Krakauer follows this journey, which ultimately results in the death of McCandless at only 24. The effective retelling of real life events through powerful epigraphs and anecdotes along with the non-serial structure of the novel allows Krakauer to ascertain the truth behind McCandless’s journey and furthermore, defend his undeserving death.
Into the Wild, written by Jon Krakauer, is a novel based on true events of a young man named Christopher McCandless, who left a promising life to venture off into the unforgiving Alaskan wilderness, just to be found dead four months later. After hearing about McCandless, Jon Karakuer, known for his writing about the outdoors fell in love with his story. This obsession led him to obsessive amounts of research contacting family and friends of McCandless. The author then spent the next couple of years reading Chris` diaries and traveling along the same paths taken by him on his journey to Alaska. Before writing the book, Karkauer wrote an article for an outdoor magazine, which was titled, “Death of an Innocent” which would eventually lead to the writing of the novel. Krakauer`s investment into the story of Christopher`s adventure would eventually lead to the style of the book itself. The random and unstructured order of the book is attributed to Krakauers unstructured investigation of Chris as he often jumped place to place on his journey into the Alaskan wilderness. Into the Wild effectively sheds light on the materialistic views of today’s society through the journey of Chris McCandless.