Wednesday, January 7, 2009

2002 - Life of Pi by Yann Martel

Life of Pi is probably the most popular of all the recent Booker winners, still on prominent display in most of the independent bookshops I patronise, and often featuring in polls of favourite books. There's a recent illustrated version too, which is probably going to become a collector's item, but I don't like it even though it's beautiful. I prefer to imagine the story and settings for myself.

The tale purports to be the bizarre story of a 16 year old boy's survival of shipwreck, cast away at sea in a lifeboat with a Bengal tiger. Or maybe not. I think that Yann has constructed his story very cleverly to show us how we would rather believe almost anything than confront unappealing truths.

There is a very good plot summary on Wikipedia which is worth reading if you are at all confused, but beware, there are still spoilers below if you have not yet read the book.

It begins credibly enough with the boy's childhood in Pondicherry, starting with an explanation for his nickname. His real name is Piscenes (French for 'swimming pool') because his father, a zookeeper, liked swimming. The teasing he gets at school results in him taking the nickname 'Pi 3.14 infinitely recurring', the significance of this being that mathematical pi (∏) is an irrational number. I think Yann is warning us early on that the boy is not to be trusted...

Anyway, the family sets sail for Canada to escape Indira Gandhi's Emergency and the ship sinks. Pi is cast off in a lifeboat with a zebra, an wounded orang-utan, a hyena and a Bengal Tiger named Richard Parker. (See the Wikipedia link for an explanation of the signifiance of this name). There's a really grisly account of the zebra's death at the hands of the hyena, and the orang-utan dies too. The tiger kills the hyena, and then it's just the tiger and the boy - who survives by mastering the tiger, to the extent that when he later has an opportunity to abandon it on an island, he doesn't do so.

The twist in this tale is that when Pi is finally rescued in Mexico, his story is investigated. The shipowner's investigation team don't believe any of his story so Pi tells them another, one which reveals the metaphors of the fantasy version. In this version, Pi is in the lifeboat with a chef, a wounded sailor and his mother. When they are starving, the sailor (the zebra) is butchered by the chef (the hyena), who also kills the mother (the orang-utan). Pi then kills the chef, i.e. the tiger is the boy's other self, the savage whose instincts make him kill in order to survive. By killing the tiger/chef the boy checks these violent impulses so that he can re-enter civilisation. The investigators don't like this version either, and when they write their report, they use the fantasy.

As a fantastic tale, it's splendid. Some parts are a bit gory and unpleasant but the prose is beautiful, e.g. when he describes the stars, and it's often very funny indeed. There are rich veins to be mined by book-groups and symbols to be deciphered everywhere.

I read and journalled this story while on holiday at Carlyle House in Rutherglen, (one of Victoria's lovely wine regions) on 4.11.02.
Lisa Hill, ANZ LitLovers

1 comment:

  1. This book was fanciful, dream like, unique , pretty much unlike anything I've read before. Yes it's a story about the pursuit of God but apart from that just a well done story. A dry humor throughout.

    regards,
    russel of Renton Auto Body Shop

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