Edit Product
3
2 reviews
60

Into the Wild


$20.00 Released January, 1996

Product Shot 1 The Pros:Book provides a lot more insight and facts than the movie. Is hard to put down once you start reading.

The Cons:The movie adaptation varies only slightly, but if you see the movie first it may skew your bias on McCandless (book is more true to the reality). Author selective & incorrect on some details like plant toxicity.

Into the Wild is the bestselling non-fiction book by Jon Krakauer, and was written in 1996 as an expansion of Krakauer's 9,000 word article, "Death of an Innocent", which appeared in the January 1993 issue of Outside magazine.

Where to Buy

loading.. Loading latest prices from ProductWiki...

Product Shot 2  Krakauer spent three years carrying out the background research work for this biography.  It covers the tale of Christopher McCandless, who in April 1992 at the age of 24, wandered into the Alaska wilderness with only 10 pounds of rice, a .22 calibre rifle, a camera, & some books.....and was found dead of starvation four months later in an abandoned bus.   After graduating in 1990 from Emory University, McCandless ceased communicating with his family, gave away his $24,000 savings account, and began travelling under the name Alexander Supertramp.  He later abandoned his car and burned all the money in his wallet in an attempt to become self-sufficient and live off the land.  Krakauer intersperses the McCandless story with discussions of his own wilderness experiences and those of other wilderness seekers (such as Everett Ruess, John Muir, and John Menlove Edwards).  The book has been adapted into a 2007 movie by the same name...screenplay and direction by Sean Penn, starring Emile Hirsch as McCandless.

User Reviews (2)

  •  
Add Pros & Cons
60
ProScore
Pros
  • 2

    Book provides a lot more insight and facts than the movie

  • 1

    Is hard to put down once you start reading

Cons
  • 1

    The movie adaptation varies only slightly, but if you see the movie first it may skew your bias on McCandless (book is more true to the reality)

  • 1

    Author selective & incorrect on some details like plant toxicity.

Comments (3)

What's on your mind? See more ProductWiki Talk
dakalvia
dakalvia: #into_the_wild

I've seen the movie and read the book...the book provides a lot more insight. I highly recommend the book...especially if you liked the movie...you will gain so much more from the book. Sean Penn took his own liberties with a few things to make for a better film and to fit his vision. The book is far more factual, but is extremely interesting to read. After reading the book you will realize that McCandless was not just some hippie-dippie kid--he was a highly intelligent kid with a extremist vision he molded from some of his favourite authors such as Tolstoy. I personally think he had a bit of a mental breakdown and went a bit overboard...but by the end of the book it sounds as if he was ready to return to society. The book says he likely died of eating a fungus/mould that had grown on the wild potatoe seeds he was eating...thus making him starve and too weak to hike out.

Jan 27, 09
post a reply
Erik
Erik: #into_the_wild I agree. His ignorance is what got him killed, however, Sean Penn did a great job exposing the underlying human drama. I'm not a big fan of hippies, but I felt for the guy. I definitely recommend the movie. Jan 27, 09
post a reply
Yale
Yale: #into_the_wild

The movie adaptation was great - but apparently not all too reflective of the true tale. I was inspired to look up facts about what really happened, and apparently it was his own ignorance and stupidity that got him killed. Nevertheless, the whole idea is pretty chilling, I still recommend the movie.

Jan 27, 09
post a reply

You may also like...