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 Into the Wild  

Into the Wild
Jon Krakauer

Anchor, 2007 - 224 pages

average customer review:based on 1167 reviews
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     highly recommended  highly recommended



In April 1992 a young man from a well-to-do family hitchhiked to Alaska and walked alone into the wilderness north of Mt. McKinley. His name was Christopher Johnson McCandless. He had given $25,000 in savings to charity, abandoned his car and most of his possessions, burned all the cash in his wallet, and invented a new life for himself. Four months later, his decomposed body was found by a moose hunter....


Provoking

This story shares a tale about life and death--real life and real death. Make no mistake, you know how this ends. But it's not the ending--it's the journey. It's about the people left behind, and the effect one soul can have when paths cross on the street called life.

I read few non-fiction books like this. I recommend fewer. But I humbly request you read this one.

Listen, learn, and live what Into the Wild tells you. It'll change the way you look at life.

Wolfe



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It makes you look inside yourself

I first picked up this book because of all the hype around the movie. I had not seen the movie and decided that I really wanted to check out the book before hand. All I needed to do was read the author's notes in the front to know that I had to read it.

Jon Krakauer's words stopped me from putting it down until the book was finished. I enjoyed how the book was woven together for good and bad on Chris Mc Candless's relationships. It made me appreciate my own experiences with people and helped me to understand how our approach to life has influences on those around us. Even when relationships are brief the outcome can be life altering.

Into the Wild is a great read. I could not put it down and I was happy that I read the book before seeing the movie.

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Excellent story with one irritating quirk.

I loved this story, and finished it in one sitting. How many of us ever dream of just dropping everything and going off, exploring nature and taking in the landscape around us, instead of the steady day to day rat race of life? I grew up into the area that Chris did, and can understand the pressures of competition, the hassle, and the need to just crawl inside yourself for awhile and be alone.
My only irritation with this story was the fact that the author cut in with his own. I see the author trying to compare his experiences in understanding Chris's thought process, but it was a deviation most distracting. It made things feel out of order and even took some of the punch out of the ending. I didn't feel the need of the authors interruptions and musings.


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Interesting, but...

I read this book to my husband and while we finished it in about 4 nights, I can't say that I loved it. The author took to many opportunities to give mini biographies about other people, including himself, which I found irritating. Also, the author seemed to scour his dictionary for obscure words that the average college graduate and avid reader would not recognize. I ended up keeping a list of words I had never heard before and looked them up on Dictionary.com. And lastly, the kid was self absorbed and a real jerk to his family. Interesting because it is a true story, but...


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A good story but not a book

I give Krakauer credit for not musing more then he did and sticking to the facts he was able to uncover. It was an interesting and sad story. I think McCandless was presented in a reasonably honest manner but did not understand his character so could sympathize with the parents. At some point you let go and hope. In this case McCandless was interesting, intelligent, charming but not world wise practical. There just wasn't enough here for an entire book, albeit short. The story was longer then a magazine article but to write a book meant including details in greater length then I thought necessary to appreciate the story. I would have enjoyed the book more if the author has filled the pages with some detail of Alaska and the trouble others encounter and how Alaskans deal with the wild.



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reviews: page 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10



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