Life of Pi by Yann Martel

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(Mass Market Paperback - Student Edition)

  • Pub. Date: May 2004
  • 420pp
  • Sales Rank: 1,468
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    Product Details

    • Pub. Date: May 2004
    • Publisher: Houghton Mifflin Harcourt
    • Format: Mass Market Paperback, 420pp
    • Sales Rank: 1,468

    Synopsis



    Annotation

    Winner of the 2002 Man Booker Prize for Fiction.

    The New Yorker

    An impassioned defense of zoos, a death-defying trans-Pacific sea adventure à la "Kon-Tiki," and a hilarious shaggy-dog story starring a four-hundred-and-fifty-pound Bengal tiger named Richard Parker: this audacious novel manages to be all of these as it tells the improbable survivor's tale of Pi Patel, a young Indian fellow named for a swimming pool (his full first name is Piscine) who endures seven months in a lifeboat with only a hungry, outsized feline for company. This breezily aphoristic, unapologetically twee saga of man and cat is a convincing hands-on, how-to guide for dealing with what Pi calls, with typically understated brio, "major lifeboat pests."

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    Biography

    In 2002, Yann Martel broke into the literary world in a big way with his whimsical, strange, and thoroughly original second novel, Life of Pi. Although several years have since passed, this bestselling work has yet to loosen its magical grip on the world.

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    Customer Reviews

    I did, but didn't like it. Mediocre is the word.by ariandre

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    February 02, 2010: I read the novel Life of Pi very recently, and was slightly interested in the book. The book seemed to be boring to me, I found myself reading a story about religion and a boy's effort to be accepted despite his differences. This soon evolved into a whole different story.

    I thought the quality was mediocre, and that the book would evolve into something more interesting. To my disappointment, it stayed at its lukewarm level of excitement. I thought this book would target my attraction to humorous books along with my fascination for philosophy. While approaching the middle of the book, I find out that this book is based on a stranded boy in the ocean. In all honesty, I highly dislike stranded survival books because they all seem the same. I read Hatchet which had the same format as Life of Pi, but also had other aspects of the book that made it more interesting. Reading Life of Pi caused my interest level to decrease over time. I read about this young boy having the ability to train this tiger in such a small space, and now that I think about it, it seems very unbelievable. This highly confusing book made my head hurt, but had moments where I was yelling to the audio book "are you serious! Why would you do that?" Pi's silly decisions had me laughing at the things he did.

    As I continued to read the book, the novel seemed to get weirder. When Pi reached the algae island, it seemed almost impossible to visualize such an island. It began to exceed in difficulty to stay focused when all of the elements were being thrown into the story.

    Nonetheless, the book was very clever. The ability of the author to create a book strictly based on a metaphoric style takes a lot of intelligence and skill. Life of Pi is a book that you read twice to see both sides of the story, and you find yourself thinking to yourself "Oh, this symbolizes this, how clever." When you reach the end and you figure out the secret, it has you wondering what is really true. This makes the story very mysterious. The only thing I wish was that I would have learned or had been hinted a little earlier in the story, so I could have fully understood the concept. As fictional as the story was, it was also believable at times. I almost never questioned how it was possible that Pi could train a tiger and live on a lifeboat for so long. Learning the secret confuse me, I almost felt betrayed that I was so true to the original story. I felt that the author was simply trying to bring across a theme: animals and humans have the same nature.

    In all, I learned many new things despite some of the boring weak spots in the book. It is a book that many should read to understand human nature. I would recommend it.

    Mixed Feelingsby Anonymous

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    January 21, 2010: Life of Pi was a recommended book by a few of my friends and family who have praised it for its wonderful story, religious outlook, and even humor. I heard that after reading the story, a person would change their perspectives on how they view life. When I tried the book, I had mixed views.

    When I first read the back cover of this book at Barnes and Noble, my thought was This sounds interesting. There are many well- known survival stories similar to Life of Pi, like Alive or Lord of the Flies, but the storyline is what really struck me. Never had I read a survival story about a boy who would be stuck on a lifeboat with a tiger; it's as if surviving on his own wouldn't be enough of a challenge. I knew right away that this story was different.

    I first thought that the tiger would become a huge obstacle in the way of survival, but I was wrong. Halfway through the book, I found that Pi Patel couldn't survive on a lifeboat without the 450 pound Bengal tiger. Maybe it was because he had background knowledge of zoo animals and their habits or because his strong belief in God gave him courage to cope with the tiger. Either way, I really liked how Martel gave the tiger the role of companionship. The tiger's role was also important, because it kept Pi distracted from grief, over the loss of his family.

    Although the story line was interesting, I felt that the book went by too slowly. Sometimes, I felt a little drowsy after only reading a few chapters. I think it was a little unnecessary for the author to write about almost every day of him trying to survive. It was repetitive to write that he caught fish today, but he didn't catch anything the next day. I can somewhat relate this story to the Diary of Anne Frank. What Anne Frank and Pi Patel have in common is that they are both tried to survive in a dangerous world. They each had their own adversities to face; for Pi it was the tiger. Another similarity was that they were both written about each day of their survival. I think that reading about Anne's everyday troubles was more interesting than reading about Pi getting sunburns every day.

    At the end, I could tell why my friends and family recommended the book. Although I didn't quite agree with their reactions of the story, I felt that the end of the book made it worth it to read. The twist at the end really made me think about what to believe.


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