I read "Into the Wild" by Jon Krakauer for the first time in the late 90's ..... since becoming a cult classic in America along the same parallels of Kerouc's "On the Road" or any of the Jack London books, it follows the adult life of a young Chris McCandless as he leaves Emory University [Phi beta kappa] and abandons all of society and begins a 2-year trek around America with nothing but a backpack and his thumb; he even donated all his savings [he came from a wealthy background] to a charity and literally burned his pocket money and started walking, leaving the acceptance from Harvard Law school on the table.
He was an idealist and didn't like society or its rules, didn't agree with currency or man-made laws and stocked his head with the writings of Tolstoy and Thoreau, et al..... thousands of disenfranchised youth have related to his story ever since then, and since his demise on a remote Alaska plain in 1992 he has reached cult status here in the states, as has Krakauer, the author who penned his story first in Outdoor magazine in 1993.
Watched the movie last night, written and directed by Sean Penn and starring Emile Hirsch as Chris; great work and 'almost' lives up to the book, which I had re-read last week in anticipation of watching this flick. I would highly recommend either one to anyone who reads here, but preferably try and do the book first [it's a quick read] and then the movie; fascinating, real-life stuff.
He was an idealist and didn't like society or its rules, didn't agree with currency or man-made laws and stocked his head with the writings of Tolstoy and Thoreau, et al..... thousands of disenfranchised youth have related to his story ever since then, and since his demise on a remote Alaska plain in 1992 he has reached cult status here in the states, as has Krakauer, the author who penned his story first in Outdoor magazine in 1993.
Watched the movie last night, written and directed by Sean Penn and starring Emile Hirsch as Chris; great work and 'almost' lives up to the book, which I had re-read last week in anticipation of watching this flick. I would highly recommend either one to anyone who reads here, but preferably try and do the book first [it's a quick read] and then the movie; fascinating, real-life stuff.
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