I think it was a great idea to add these chapters into the book. The chapters about Chris's family were not as effective on me because I had felt that Krakauer had basically been hinting at what the issues there were for most of the book. I knew that Krakauer was going to include some of his own life experiences into the novel, because he says that in the author's note. When I finally got to his two chapters, I was blown away. I had not been expecting anything like that. The connections between their experiences were so good and the emotion with which he told his own story kept me riveted. For me, it only added to the credibility of the novel, which I had held in high regard before this. To me it specifically addressed one naysayer who he quoted on page 71 as saying, "Krakauer is a kook if he doesn't think Chris 'Alexander Supertramp' McCandless was a kook". All of a sudden, with his own hiking adventure in the book, Krakauer becomes a very reliable and experienced kook doesn't he? To me, putting that chapter in the book showed that, 1)Krakauer knows what he's talking about when it comes to people venturing into the wild alone and 2)Krakauer knows what it feels like, and what goes through one's head, and what motives a person may have to go into the wild alone.
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I completely agree. I thought the chapters about Krakauer added credibility to the novel, without these chapters, and before I read them, I wouldn't think Krakauer really knew anything about the topic besides what he had researched.
ReplyDeleteI felt the same way when I read Krakauer's personal story. It blew me away and I realized he was the perfect person to be writing about Chris' story. Good observation on how his family problems didn't really need to be pointed out.
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