Life of Pi by Yann Martel — book cover

Book details

Life of Pi

by Yann Martel

2001 · Bloomsbury Publishing

About the book

After a cargo ship sinks in the Pacific Ocean, sixteen-year-old Pi Patel finds himself stranded on a lifeboat with an adult Bengal tiger named Richard Parker. For 227 days, Pi secures his survival by applying his knowledge of zoology and marine biology to catch fish and collect rainwater. He establishes a precarious dominance over the predator through behavioral conditioning and whistle training. The narrative tracks their drift across open water, documenting the physical toll of starvation and the psychological demands of constant vigilance within a confined, floating ecosystem.

This book serves readers interested in the mechanics of survival and the intersection of religious thought with biological reality. Readers observe how Pi uses prayer, routine, and discipline to manage isolation and trauma. One walks away with a perspective on how the human mind constructs narratives to endure extreme hardship. It functions as a study of resilience, showing how projected meaning and the instinct to live can sustain an individual when the physical world offers no hope of rescue.

Details

Published
2001
Publisher
Bloomsbury Publishing
ISBN
9781350295704
Language
EN