Into The Wild By Jon Krakauer

1367 Words3 Pages

Into the Wild has become a well known book and movie, and many people have come across it one way or another. In short, it’s a story about an adventurous man named Christopher McCandless. It all started in April of 1992 when McCandless, a bit on the quirky side, changed his name to Alexander Supertramp and went through a great deal of travel. One prominent image in the story is the “Magic Bus”, or more formally known as the Fairbanks CIty Transit System Bus 142, found along the Stampede Trail. Unannounced, he left his average, middle-class american life to hitchhike his way up to Alaska and spend what would be his final few months of life, Into the Wild, of the unforgiving Alaskan wilderness. The man behind the madness is the author, Jon Krakauer. …show more content…

This may be why it’s so easy for some Military recruiters to convince young men to join. Maybe it’s just a phase some go through, or maybe it’s a real part of our development as men. One theory is that Krakauer may have convinced some young men to try and emulate Chris, and maybe in Krakauer's life he did the same. After all, Jon Krakauer was every bit of an adventurous young man. In his early life, his life story is almost parallel to that of McCandless, he is just fortunate enough to still be with us today. During the time that the story of Chris McCandless, aka Alexander Supertramp, many people believed that McCandless was just another dumb american kid who made front page news with his death. The fact that the protagonist and the author were so alike, one reason Krakauer may have wrote the book was to set the record straight. Basically letting everyone know that what McCandless did wasn't crazy or foolish, but something that he had to do, and wanted to do. Showing us that no one can say you're crazy for following your dreams, whether it gets you killed or not. In other ways Krakauer was similar to McCandless. Krakauer spent three weeks alone in a region in Alaska, and climbed the Devil's Thumb, an experience that he writes about in Into the Wild. Krakauer's most well known adventure was his summiting of Mount Everest in 1996. He & his team summited the tallest mountain in the world, but met a huge storm at the …show more content…

Does Krakauer make kids want to go out and be like McCandless because it seems like the bold, manly thing to do? Does Krakauer use the comparisons of Waterman, Rosselini, and McCunn to show the spirit of McCandless, and have his audience assume that they can throw both the author and protagonist into the same boat as the three nature boys before them? Whatever you may think, there’s no denying that Chris McCandless was not an unintelligent, ignorant traveler, but a man who followed his American

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