
Yann Martel's imaginative and unforgettable Life of Pi is a
magical reading experience, an endless blue expanse of storytelling
about adventure, survival, and ultimately, faith. The precocious
son of a zookeeper, 16-year-old Pi Patel is raised in Pondicherry,
India, where he tries on various faiths for size, attracting
"religions the way a dog attracts fleas." Planning a move to
Canada, his father packs up the family and their menagerie and they
hitch a ride on an enormous freighter. After a harrowing shipwreck,
Pi finds himself adrift in the Pacific Ocean, trapped on a 26-foot
lifeboat with a wounded zebra, a spotted hyena, a seasick
orangutan, and a 450-pound Bengal tiger named Richard Parker ("His
head was the size and color of the lifebuoy, with teeth"). It
sounds like a colorful setup, but these wild beasts don't burst
into song as if co-starring in an anthropomorphized Disney feature.
After much gore and infighting, Pi and Richard Parker remain the
boat's sole passengers, drifting for 227 days through
shark-infested waters while fighting hunger, the elements, and an
overactive imagination. In rich, hallucinatory passages, Pi
recounts the harrowing journey as the days blur together, elegantly
cataloging the endless passage of time and his struggles to
survive: "It is pointless to say that this or that night was the
worst of my life. I have so many bad nights to choose from that
I've made none the champion." |
Yann Martel was born in Spain in 1963. After studying philosophy
at university, he worked odd jobs and traveled before turning to
writing at the age of twenty-six. He is the author of the
internationally acclaimed 2002 Man Booker Prize–winning novel
Life of Pi, which was translated into thirty-eight languages
and spent fifty-seven weeks on the New York Times bestseller
list. Yann Martel lives in Saskatchewan, Canada. |
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