Into the Wild by Jon Krakauer — book cover

Book details

Into the Wild

by Jon Krakauer

1996 · Pan Macmillan

About the book

In 1992, Chris McCandless abandoned his possessions and middle-class expectations to live off the land in the Alaskan interior. Jon Krakauer reconstructs McCandless's two-year odyssey through the American West, documenting his rejection of materialism and his pursuit of raw experience. Using journals, letters, and interviews, the narrative follows McCandless to his final destination in an abandoned bus on the Stampede Trail. The book examines the botanical mistakes and environmental pressures that led to his starvation, while comparing his ascetic drive to historical figures who sought solitude in nature.

This account serves readers interested in the ethics of extreme self-reliance and the hazards of wilderness survival. It appeals to those who study the tension between societal obligations and the desire for total autonomy. Readers finish the book with a technical understanding of the risks associated with backcountry foraging and a clear-eyed view of how idealism can lead to isolation and physical ruin. It provides a sobering look at the practical consequences of attempting to live outside human systems without sufficient preparation.

Details

Published
1996
Publisher
Pan Macmillan
ISBN
9781529011906
Language
EN