Into The Wild Analysis Essay

600 Words2 Pages

Ej Oliver
Mrs.Case
Erwc
1/19/2018
Christopher McCandless A meaningful life is a type of life that can be expressed by people in many unique ways. In the novel “Into the Wild” by Jon Krakauer published in 1996, the protagonist Christopher McCandless abandons his old life and goes on a journey to Alaska as “Alexander Supertramp”. Told in the third person, The author addresses the theme by describing the settings of land across the country, establishing the main conflict of Chris preparing for the journey that would eventually lead to his death and incorporating the literary devices of allusion and imagery. Krakauer’s purpose was to show reader the life of Chris McCandless and why he went on the trip to Alaska. The author creates a mood of empathy since both had similar background and interests …show more content…

Ronald Franz met Christopher McCandless and they grew very close and benefited from each other's lives. A meaningful life is from bonds that shape a life for the better. Franz and McCandless’ bond resulted in both of them changing and being more than what they were previously.”...the eighty-one-year-old-man took the brash twenty-four-year-old vagabond’s advice to heart...he moved out of his apartment and set up camp on the bajada”(Krakauer 58). Franz changed by not staying in one spot and exploiting the wilderness. Another person that Chris grew close to was Jan Burres, a drifter similar to him but had different methods. She and her husband cared for Chris and wanted to take care of him whenever they met each other. “I’d thought he'd be fine in the end...He’d figured out how to paddle a canoe down to Mexico, how to hop freight trains, how to score at inner-city missions” (Krakauer 45). They grew very close and their relationship altered their lifestyles and created a positive mood on their lives. Burres helped Chris have a meaningful

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