Details are like the crew of a ship. Although they are not recognized, without the crew, a ship could not sail just as without details a book can't be successful. The book Life of Pi by Yann Martel is packed with details creating better relationships, characters, and stories within the story, than in the movie. I believe that the Life of Pi book is better than the movie because of the extreme amount of detail; creating more intriguing characters, more meaningful relationships, and more interesting side stories.
In the Life of Pi book, characterization is one of the main focuses of the author, making sure that the descriptions are nothing less than perfect. Piscine Patel, also known as Pi is described as a smart, scholarly young soul who is the son of the owner of a zoo. This provides Pi former knowledge of animals to help him through his life-changing voyage. He is also very curious about religion, at one point three different religious leaders refer to Pi as a member of their religion. Pi believed in all three Islam, Christianity, and Hinduism, his mothers religion. His interest in religion is later used to teach lessons of faith and help Pi survive his 227 days lost at sea with an adult Bengal tiger. In the movie Pi seems vaguely interested in religion, which loses the whole point of the book that makes faith and religion the strongest theme. The movie also skips over Pi’s education, only showing him in elementary school, while the book describes his education all the
Being narrated by an older version of the main character, Life of Pi is a story about a man named Pi Patel. Most of the beginning of the novel includes all the history of his life; it introduces topics such as his major, the definition of his name, and his family. His majors are religion and Zoology, which comes back later in the book. It also gives the reader the interesting background of the meaning of his name, based off of a swimming pool. These larger topics and more were shared with the readers. A prominent part of all of this is the fact that it almost always comes back to animals.
In my opinion, the book was better. The book gave you a better description of Pi’s life before the lifeboat where as the movie did not. Some people believe that the movie is better because it cuts out the many unnecessary details, but the details about Pi’s survival and the things he knew about the animals was half of the story for me. The movie was like a summary and I like when there is a bigger picture, in my opinion, that is why the book is
How would you feel being out at sea stuck on a lifeboat for 227 days with only zoo animals for company and then watching them all be killed and then spend the rest of your days at sea with a Royal Bengal tiger weighing 450 pounds and about nine feet long. Life of Pi by Yann Martel starts off in Pondicherry India with Pi Patel and his family, they then load some animals and themselves onto a cargo ship on its way to Canada. After they are on the ship there is a malfunction on the ship and it sinks. Pi becomes isolated on a lifeboat with only the company of a few zoo animals. After some time he is only left with Richard Parker the tiger and fighting to stay alive. On his journey through the sea he eventually finds an island to which he goes and
Throughout the entire novel the author gives us characteristics about Pi, he is the protagonist and, for most of the novel the narrator. In the chapters that frame the story and tell us everything that has happened they portray Pi as a shy, graying, middle-aged boy, whom tells the author about his early childhood and the shipwreck that changed his life, and gave him a new friendship with someone whom you would never believe a human could become friends with. This novel makes everyone question the truth which makes us wonder if Pi’s story is accurate and makes us wonder what pieces we should believe. Pi emphasizes the importance of choosing the better story which makes
The way Pi acts throughout his journey suggests that having faith is one of the most important practises to learn as it can give an individual hope. Pi has a strong connection to all his practising faiths: Christianity, Islam, and Hinduism. Society is set to have many unspoken rules that we must abide by to
What happens when an Individual seeks union with divinity Where the protagonist Piscine Molitor Patel “Pi” is visited by the most extraordinary dreams, trances, visions, thoughts, sensations, and remembrances. In this 2012 American survival drama film Life Of Pi written by David Magee and directed by Ang Lee, Pi is
In contrast to the background of Lord of the Flies, Pi, the main character in Life of Pi, has a relatively peaceful childhood. He grows up in the 1970s in Pondicherry, South India, during a time of peace and prosperity. Except for school bullies, he is largely ignorant of violence, bar the time his father exposed him and his brother to the dangerous tendencies of the zoo animals. Furthermore, Pi explores religion for himself, and while he does have values impressed upon him by his parents, such as not eating meat, he is largely responsible for creating his own unique set of values that revolve around three major religions.
At the beginning of the novel, Pi’s story is described as “a story that will make you believe in God.” Writer himself Yann Martel was going thru his writers crisis, traveling world looking for a good story to write something about. Martel found a man who told his story. His man named Piscine Molitor Patel who is a practicing follower of three religions: Hinduism, Christianity and Islam. For this reason, extremely mature boy must constantly fight the lack of tolerance and understanding in his surroundings. While in the case of adult people the lack of a specific decision on the faith can be perceived as humiliating, but Pi is fully justified because of his young age. His desire is to find the road to the creator will be seriously tested during
Clearly, The Book Thief and Life of Pi show that both of the protagonists are affected by their setting because they have the same feelings though one is in WWII Germany and one is stranded at sea. Both of the protagonists are affected by their settings, because both of their settings scare and make them feel uncomfortable. In Life of Pi, The protagonist Pi is stranded at Sea with Richard Parker who is a tiger. This makes Pi feel uncomfortable, isolated, and scared for his life. He’s scared because of the tiger and also because he is stranded at sea so he doesn’t know how long he is going to able to stay alive.
1. Reason One of the most enjoyable aspects of the novel was the way Pi presents his point of view in his telling of the story. In the earlier stages of the book Pi tells us of his discovery of religion which he turns to for hope later on when the cargo ship him and his family travel on sinks, leaving him orphaned and lost. Throughout the novel he retells the story of his survival with a Bengal tiger named Richard Parker and the situation of their survival.
Lord of the Flies and Life of Pi are two epic adventures with a bountiful amount of similarities and differences. William Golding writes Lord of the Flies in 1954, and Life of Pi is written by Yann Martel in 2001. Golding’s write is set up with boys who are stranded on a island and are left to take care of themselves with no one to answer to. They face many hardships and are left to make their own decisions. Yann Martel sets up his story with the main character Pi who faces his hardships after he is left stranded after a accident on the waters. Both of these two works accentuate the question of what happens to people when there is no one to answer to, and they must make decisions on their own. The two works reveal how the human condition is within
On its surface, Martel’s Life of Pi proceeds as a far-fetched yet not completely unbelievable tale about a young Indian boy named Pi who survives after two hundred twenty-seven days on a lifeboat with a Bengal tiger named Richard Parker. It is an uplifting and entertaining story, with a few themes about companionship and survival sprinkled throughout. The ending, however, reveals a second story – a more realistic and dark account replacing the animals from the beginning with crude human counterparts. Suddenly, Life of Pi becomes more than an inspiring tale and transforms into a point to be made about rationality, faith, and how storytelling correlates the two. The point of the book is not for the reader to decide which
When Yann Martel tells of Pi Patel’s life story after the shipwreck, he presents it in two distinctive ways: one being with animals, and one without. As a young boy, Pi began to develop a love of animals as a result of growing up on the lands of Pondicherry Zoo, his family zoo in India. He also finds that he has a deep passion for religion. Supposedly, Life of Pi will make one believe in God, as it did to Pi in these two stories.
Embellished storytelling has remained an art form among human civilizations since the dawn of humanity. Stories were passed down through generations with each version obtaining new elements thrown in by the next storyteller. The modifications made to each story added specific fictional elements to better convey the meaning and emotions of the story. Many of these stories attempt to explain unexplainable phenomenon through stories of Gods like in Greek mythology. Yann Martel, in his famed work Life of Pi, depicts a story with a structure manipulated to create a fictional representation of the truth. The main character, Pi, who tells this story asks the narrator, “Which story do you prefer? Which is the better story?” (Martel 178). Martel explains the fictional twist of the story as a way to bring out the true essence of it. This fictional variation can be observed as a representation of Pi’s faith and it greater captivates the listener than in what is likely the truthful version.
All stories, real or fictitious, have at least a few aspects of truth to them, whether it be in the moral, plot, or details of the story. Life of Pi by Yang Martel, and Big Fish by Daniel Wallace, use stories to recreate an account of questionable things that may or may not have happened. “That’s what fiction is about, isn’t it, the selective transforming of reality? The twisting of it to bring out its