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Into the Wild

Into the Wild

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Author: Jon Krakauer
Publisher: Villard
Category: Book

List Price: $23.00
Buy Used: $7.90
You Save: $15.10 (66%)



New (15) Used (31) Collectible (12) from $7.90

Avg. Customer Rating: 4.0 out of 5 stars 1201 reviews
Sales Rank: 19754

Media: Hardcover
Edition: 1
Number Of Items: 1
Pages: 224
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.8
Dimensions (in): 8.1 x 5.2 x 1.1

ISBN: 067942850X
Dewey Decimal Number: 917.98045
EAN: 9780679428503
ASIN: 067942850X

Publication Date: January 13, 1996
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
Shipping: Expedited shipping available
Condition: Good - Free shipping confirmation & tracking. 100% of your purchase helps Goodwill create jobs and change lives. A readable copy. All pages are intact, and the cover is intact (the dust cover may be missing). May have usage wear, reading creases, writing inside, bent pages, notes, highlighting, stains, light damage, exposure to water and/or stickers. If DVD/CD with external signs of wear, but one that continues to play perfectly. The item, inclusions, box or jewel case may be missing, damaged or marked but what is included remains complete and legible. Has not been tested but appears playable.

Also Available In:

  • Paperback - Into the Wild
  • Hardcover - Into the Wild
  • Paperback - Into the Wild
  • School & Library Binding - Into the Wild
  • Paperback - Into the Wild
  • Audio Download - Into the Wild (Unabridged)
  • Paperback - Into the Wild
  • Hardcover - Into the Wild
  • Hardcover - Into the Wild
  • Audio Cassette - Into the Wild
  • Audio Cassette - Into The Wild
  • Audio CD - Into the Wild
  • Hardcover - Into the Wild
  • Library Binding - Into the Wild
  • Paperback - Into the Wild

Similar Items:

  • Into Thin Air: A Personal Account of the Mt. Everest Disaster
  • Eiger Dreams: Ventures Among Men and Mountains
  • Music for the Motion Picture Into the Wild
  • Touching the Void: The True Story of One Man's Miraculous Survival
  • Walden

Editorial Reviews:

Amazon.com Review
What would possess a gifted young man recently graduated from college to literally walk away from his life? Noted outdoor writer and mountaineer Jon Krakauer tackles that question in his reporting on Chris McCandless, whose emaciated body was found in an abandoned bus in the Alaskan wilderness in 1992.

Described by friends and relatives as smart, literate, compassionate, and funny, did McCandless simply read too much Thoreau and Jack London and lose sight of the dangers of heading into the wilderness alone? Krakauer, whose own adventures have taken him to the perilous heights of Everest, provides some answers by exploring the pull the outdoors, seductive yet often dangerous, has had on his own life.

Product Description
In a compelling book that evokes the writings of Thoreau, Muir, and Jack London, Krakauer recounts the haunting and tragic mystery of 22-year-old Chris McCandless who disappeared in April 1992 into the Alaskan wilderness in search of a raw, transcendent experience. His emaciated corpse was discovered four months later. Maps. NPR sponsorship.


Customer Reviews:   Read 1196 more reviews...

3 out of 5 stars Into the wild review   October 1, 2008
This book was okay it wasn't all that great, but if you like an autobiography then this is the book for you.


1 out of 5 stars Hubristic fool   September 23, 2008
Unfortunately, I find this to be one of the most idiotic stories I have ever read. It is the story of a young man with no respect for the enormity of nature. His story is akin to waiting on a beach to watch a category 5 hurricane make landfall. I feel sorry for Chris' family
I love Krakauer's other books.



5 out of 5 stars Into the Wild   September 10, 2008
this is the story of chris mccandles. candles inherits money, then lights it on fire out of principle. he then travels the country excoriating people for not doing the same. in between stints working at mcdonalds, he ventures off into the wild with nothing but a gun and fishing pole. after almost dying repeatedly, he decides alaska is the only wilderness tough enough for him. he walks down a trail off the highway, wades across a stream, then starts writing a journal. he gets hungry and decides to go back, but is blocked by the ice-melt swollen stream. not realizing that getting upriver to a crossing point is now a matter of life or death, he goes back to his campground. something very bad then happens to him and he can't get out. the best parts of the book are the several chilling accounts of how seemingly innocuous mistakes cost some very tough people their lives all alone in the wilderness. the author will make you feel like you're about to die, that's how well written it is.


5 out of 5 stars Evading the threat of human intimacy in immoderation   September 9, 2008
 14 out of 16 found this review helpful

After watching and liking Sean Penn's movie version of this story, I didn't think I needed to read the book. My daughter told me otherwise. She said, the book has things that are missing in the film. And the book idolizes the hero less than the film does. She is right.
Krakauer was first hired by an outdoors magazine to write an article about the death of the young man in the Alaskan wilderness. He got hooked by this case, he says. One assumes after reading the book that the main attraction to him was the obvious similarity of Chris McC to himself: he tells us of his own daredevilish solo mountaineering adventure in Alaska, which he survived only by accident. Just as Chris failed to survive by accident.
JK identifies so strongly with Chris that he is sure that there was no death wish, no hidden suicide involved. He digs deep into the person that C. might have been, based on his diaries and on interviews with those who knew him. He tells us of other, similar cases, of survivors and of some who perished. He develops theories about the personalities of the type, without accepting some of the standard pet models, like the Oedipus version. He thinks that C., like not a few of those seduced by the wild, seems to have been driven by a variety of lust that supplanted sexual desire. The man enjoyed his 'suffering', the hardships from surviving in nature, and he did not want to die in the experiment. He even tried to proselytize and told others that joy of life comes from encounter with new experiences. (Which, by the way, I would partly buy into, but I know many many who think that their pleasure comes from avoiding surprises and new things.)
The role of the narrator Krakauer is missing in the film, which takes away the philosophical background and reduces it to a good plain story.
The film gives us Chris as a charmer who does odd things. The book is not quite so enthusiastic about him, shows more of his downsides, his monomania, his self-absorption, his impatience and unforgivingness. In short his overlong adolescence. The man died before he grew up.
Why did he die? Survival in the wilderness is tough, and he probably never believed in the concept of mortality as far as it concerned himself. He was not incompetent, but he made some stupid mistakes and had some bad luck.
And definitely Alaska does not seem to be the best place for eremitic experiments. Good thing to know for Hermits.



5 out of 5 stars I finished Wild quickly.   September 1, 2008
 1 out of 1 found this review helpful

and for me - Jon Krakauer's writing is the kind of stuff that makes for late nights and tired workdays. I can't pay him a higher compliment. This one was a bit different than his other efforts in that Krakuer plays more the role of detective/sociologist rather than an an insightful expedition biographer. However, the story was as rivetting and perhaps even more powerful. I'm anxiously awaiting his next one! I'd also recommend reading Georgiou's masterpiece-- THE FATES, Fates (classic) if you haven't yet. I stumbled upon it at a book store and can't stop talking about it. His writing style is very similar to Jon Krakauer


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