Into The Wild Compare And Contrast Essay

1075 Words3 Pages

Immersed by Adventure Alaska is one of the most unpredictable, lonely, and barren places in the country, and it would soon become home to two men’s most extreme expeditions. Christopher Mccandless traveled to Alaska in 1992 after already spending two years on his own; his story is shared in the Jon Krakauer novel Into the Wild. Jon shares Chris’s story of attempting to defeat the barren Stampede Trail through discovered journal entries from Chris, as well as interviews with the people he interacted with. To compare himself to Chris, Krakauer reveals his own story of tackling Alaska when he was approximately Chris’s age. Jon traveled to Alaska in an attempt to scale the hazardous Devil’s Thumb, and he explains the horrific experiences and trials he must complete to survive. Both men speak of the intense challenges of Alaska, and how their health and sanity are put at risk. Although both men took the same journey to Alaska, their lives, values, and motives were very different, as well as analogous in some ways.
The fathers of Krakauer and Mccandless played a substantial …show more content…

There were tensions between Chris and Walt as well throughout much of his teen years as “Given Walt’s need to exert control and Chris’s extravagantly independent nature, polarization was inevitable” (Krakauer 64). Chris’s negative feelings only worsened when he discovered his father’s relationship with another woman in California when he was married to Billie. Walt also fathered six children when he was supposed to be taking care of Billie, Chris, and his sister Carine. Unlike Chris, Krakauer eventually discovered the pain he may have caused his father, and he also felt sympathy for the stress and anger he might have caused him to suffer through. However, Chris did not forgive Walt for what he did, and showed no signs of changing

Open Document