...from the book of Life of Pi by Author Yann Martel to Life of Pi by Director Ang Lee. Delving into both works, it should be clear that books will always contain the most detail while the movie will have to compress, shorten, or change so the film can be viewed properly by the audience. As well in most cases, “white washing” or changing the film in some parts will lead the viewers to see a different development that the readers were given. Mainly speaking, the differences from book to film gives the significance of Pi’s growth a change of course. Targeting on Pi’s beginnings and lessons,...
Words: 1443 - Pages: 6
...Life of the true story Is the sea alone enough to drive a man mad? Pi Patel survived 227 days at sea in a lifeboat with whom he shared with a Bengal Tiger. Anyone who has read the story should know that Pi grew up in a zoo, he gives his life story, and the second story held none of that. First of all, Pi grew up in a zoo. In the story, Pi is interested in learning Zoology, and his father owned a zoo. He learned how to take care of the animals, and how to tame them. In chapter 71, Pi goes on telling the readers how to tame a wild animal because Pi is starting to tame Richard Parker. “Then I made my point, feet on the gunnel, boat rolling, my single-note language blasting from the whistle, and Richard Parker moaning and gasping at the bottom of the boat. My fifth shield lasted me the rest of his training.”, this quote from the novel proves that Pi certainly survived living with a Bengal Tiger....
Words: 476 - Pages: 2
...In the book Life of Pi by Yann Martel religion has an impact on Pi the main character. Pi goes through his life being introduced to multiple religions. I believe that these religions have an impact on him. I believe they make him who he is. The three religions he are introduced to are Hinduism, Christianity, and Islam. Pi is introduced to these at around the same time and he believes in all of them. The first thing he knew about was Hinduism. “ I have no conscious memory of this first go-round in a temple, but some smell of incuse, some play of light and shadow,some flame, some burst of colour, something of the sultriness and mystery of the place most of stayed,”(Martel,59). Pi was a baby when his aunt had taken him to a Hindu temple. There...
Words: 315 - Pages: 2
...lost and confused for the rest of their life. No matter whether that person can get back to the place they were before, their life will forever be altered by the event. Frankly, ‘happy endings’ do not exist at all and living is about how you roll with the punches. Life is full of disappointments, painful memories, drastic devastations and tragedies that can cause serious psychological problems later on. In Life of Pi by Yann Martel, Pi experiences a terrible journey that changes his life forever, consequently, the statement, “This story has a happy ending,” is not a valid conclusion to be made. Pi has a very functional, loving...
Words: 1099 - Pages: 5
...and powerful relationship that has been around for thousands and thousands of years ago. Many pet owners value their pets as a member of the family and nothing less. In Life of Pi, Pi knows about building relationships with animals and how to make that bond extra special. Although Pi and Richard Parker develop an uplifting attachment over time, those two hundred and twenty-seven days were not easy. Not knowing where you’re going, not knowing when or what your next meal will be, wondering if your family is alive and if they’re looking for you. All of these unbearable scenarios aren’t even everything Pi went through. On top of being onboard with a four hundred and...
Words: 650 - Pages: 3
...Most people never think of how their families, their homes, and even their entire lives could be changed in an instant, but this is a devastating reality for many; homes evacuated, children taken away, belongings stolen, friends and family killed. Two such accounts of this immense tragedy are Elie Wiesel's autobiographical story, Night, and Yann Martel’s fictional tale, Life of Pi. Faced with grief, the main characters of both books overcome their hardships through a beacon of hope, a tremendous determination, and a courage that nobody should ever need to possess. In Night, the main character and author of the book, Elie Wiesel, is taken from his home and put into a concentration camp run by Hitler’s Nazi party, along with his family and his fellow passengers. When they first arrive, his mother and sister are taken away to be slaughtered, and his father succumbs to dysentery later on. Toward the very end of the story, the camp is liberated, and he is taken to a hospital to have the injuries he suffered at the camp treated. He has the opportunity to look into a mirror for the first...
Words: 606 - Pages: 3
...In the book and movie life of pi, determination is a huge part of pi’s life. Its seen in his life from when he was on the boat to just trying to fit in at school.Determination can be seen in all walks of life. “You must take life the way it comes at you and make the best of it.’’(1.35.91) Pi’s life before the shipwreck was a serious of up’s and downs.From being called pissing instead of Piscine.When the new school year started he was determined to never be called pissing again,before the teacher could call his name he took it upon himself to never be called pissing again.He got up and spelt out his name and said that instead of Piscine that everyone could call him pi.One of the ups in his life was living in a zoo how he describe the sights...
Words: 688 - Pages: 3
...A fourteen year-old Pi familiarizes himself with a new religion. At first, he has a sarcastic tone: “Or rather, since Christians are so fond of capital letters, a Story,”(53). Pi is a curious young man, simply searching for a new understanding. His search continues when he finds a church “up the hill to the left,”(57). To Pi, religion is simply another way to express himself. The author, Yann Martel, of Life of Pi shapes the main character's view of a Christian life through foreshadowing Jesus’ love to the image of the three holy places. When a young Piscine happens upon “a Christian church,”(51) he meets a Catholic priest, Father Martin. As they sit down to have tea and biscuits an intrigued Pi asks the Father to tell him a story, the story. Piscine didn’t understand why “their religion had one Story, and to it they came back again and again, over and over,”(53). Pi’s absence of knowledge about Father Martin’s faith only intrigues him more. With each question Pi has about Christianity, Father Martin replies with love. A love so deep that it is hard to fathom. A love that asks for nothing in return. Jesus’ love is a pure and sacrificial love. In a book of the Bible it talks of Jesus being the ultimate sacrifice: “Then came the day of Unleavened Bread on which the Passover lamb had to be sacrificed,”(Luke 22:7). If those...
Words: 487 - Pages: 2
...While reading Yann Martels «life of Pi» book Pi always talked about stars and moon he always described them. Sky is very mystery and interesting, it is always helped to people know the way, know the weather and many other things. Stars. We always see them at night. They draw our attention to the special, mesmerizing glow. Our ancestors believed that they can influence our destiny and our future. I think they can’t say about our fate but they can say us about weather and they can help us to find our way if we are lost. For a long time one of the main purposes of astronomy has navigation - star guided the captains of ships in the high seas and the conductors of caravans in the desert, for many centuries helped the stars do not go astray travelers. Navigation with the stars: The most common way to navigate by stars...
Words: 1429 - Pages: 6
...Caleb In the book Life of Pi, the color orange comes up many times throughout the book. The book does not ever tell the reader what the color means, but it gives small subtle hints about what it symbolises. The color orange in the book symbolizes hope, and survival. Just when his life gets horrible the color orange gives hope for Pi. The color orange shows up in a lot of places, from important characters to items that Pi comes across. The lifeboat, arguably the most important item for Pi. Without it, he would have drowned in the shipwreck. A lifeboat is the ultimate sign for survival. The lifeboat is the start of the orange life savers Pi finds over his time. Another vital item for Pis time at sea was the med kit. Since the kit was so important...
Words: 659 - Pages: 3
...Prompt 1 All stories have a beginning, a middle, and an end. Yann Martel’s Life of Pi is no different. However, some argue that the first part, which deals with Pi’s coming of age and homeland, could be disregarded entirely to make a stronger novel. In viewing the completed work, it is clear that every component, no matter how obscure or bizarre, is absolutely critical to the success of the novel. All elements of the writing, from Pi’s religion to his fascination with sloths, are vital, for they all work together to describe a larger story. At first, the explanation of Pi’s religion and the nature of animals appears to be repetitive and irrelevant. It is nothing more than supportive information, which seems only useful when Pi prays to both Jesus and Vishnu, or when he rattles off facts about female orangutans. As he wrestles with isolation, danger, and despair, he...
Words: 667 - Pages: 3
...Like any good work of fiction, symbols play a key role in Yann Martell’s Life of Pi, the most important being Richard Parker. Richard parker, a four hundred and fifty pound Bengal tiger, is forced to share a life boat with the protagonist, Pi. While initially, his ferociousness scares Pi, after taming him, the two learn to coexist. At the end of the novel, when the two reach land, Richard Parker runs off into the jungle without a farewell. Through the way Pi speaks to the tiger and as the story develops, it becomes apparent that Martell intended Richard parker to symbolize Pi’s will to survive and his primal state. Although he is ferocious and fearsome, Richard Parker’s presence is what drives Pi’s will to live. Pi faces many issues on the...
Words: 721 - Pages: 3
...In Yann Martel’s Life of Pi, and Isabel Allende’s The House of Spirits, both employ magic realism in their novels. Isabel Allende, a Chilean writer, is well known for writing in this style. Many of her books incorporate this genre. Yann Martel, a novelist born in Spain, only uses this style of writing in this one book. Both authors are able to integrate this unique style of writing into these novels to help express their themes. Magic Realism is a “chiefly Latin-American narrative strategy that is characterized by the matter-of-fact inclusion of fantastic or mythical elements into seemingly realistic fiction”. It is a unique style of writing most commonly used by Latin American authors. This genre is also being applied to art. The term now can apply to paintings. It was created in the early 1900’s by a German writer but shifted to Latin America where it is still most commonly found today. In Yann Martel’s Life of Pi, magic realism is present throughout Pi’s long journey in the Pacific Ocean. The ship, Tsimtsum, that he and his family are traveling on sank and he was the lone survivor. He was tossed onto a lifeboat with some animals from his family’s zoo. Two and a half days into his adventure, Pi discovered that he was not the only one on it. “How I had failed to notice for two and a half days a 450-pound Bengal tiger in a lifeboat twenty-six feet long was a conundrum I would have to try to crack later, when I had more energy. The feet surely made Richard Parker the largest...
Words: 959 - Pages: 4
...assumption is that you will consider both the similarities and differences; in other words, you will compare and contrast. Make sure you know the basis for comparison The assignment sheet may say exactly what you need to compare, or it may ask you to come up with a basis for comparison yourself. • Provided by the question: The question may ask that you consider the gradual loss of morals by major characters in Yann Martel’s Life of Pi and George Orwell’s Animal Farm. The basis for comparison will be the loss of morals by central figures in each text. • Developed by you: The question may simply ask that you compare the two novels. If so, you will need to develop a basis for comparison, that is, a theme, concern, or device common to both works from which you can draw similarities and differences. Develop a list of similarities and differences Once you know your basis for comparison, think critically about the similarities and differences between the items you are comparing, and compile a list of them. For example, you might decide that in Life of Pi, Pi simultaneously experiences a gradual loss of morals as his chances of survival are put more and more at risk, whereas in Animal Farm, Napoleon always possessed questionable morals which become further corrupted as...
Words: 1578 - Pages: 7
...Everything Is Best “One day a disciple was walking through the marketplace. He overheard a customer say to the butcher, ‘Give me the best piece of meat you have.’ The butcher replied, ‘Everything in my shop is the best. You cannot find any piece of meat that is not the best.’ At these words, the disciple received enlightenment.” — Zen koan Reviewing Yann Martel’s astounding Life of Pi is a great deal like trying to solve Zen koans, the ancient conundrums used by Buddhist teachers to facilitate their disciples in reaching a state of enlightenment. The trick of the koan is that there really isn’t one correct solution. There may be many—as many different ones as there are students seeking enlightenment—or there may be none. Who knows. The koans are simply tools to promote non-linear, out-of-the-box type thinking which will, according to the Eastern mystics, lead a seeker to a sense of oneness and harmony with the universe.Likewise, there is no one answer to the question, “What is Life of Pi about?” There will be probably be as many answers to that question as there are people who read the book. A perusal of online booksellers reveals that this book can be categorized as a survival story, a tall tale, an action piece, a work about human/animal relationships, and a fiction about (1) India, (2) adolescence, (3) zoos and zoology, and (4) the Pacific Ocean, which indicates to this reviewer that book dealers are grasping at anything they can find to define what essentially defies...
Words: 279 - Pages: 2