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Loading... Life of Piby Yann Martel
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will love Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book. I felt like the author at one point bored of carefully writing the book and decided to just dump all his notes as last chapters. He starts really good, in a very short amount time I already felt very close the main character and the setting of the book.. However the minute he decides to break the flow of the and starts telling random bits the book died for me. ( )From the cover art, this appears to be about a boy and a tiger in a boat. And it is, though it's conspicuously lacking of seafaring felines for more than the first quarter of the book. Up to that point it talks mostly about Pi's life as the son of a zookeeper in India and his quest to find religion (which he does - three of them, in fact). At times it's a little preachy, others a little graphic, but all in all it's a fairly believable tale about survival in a lifeboat. In a nutshell: Pi Patel's family decides to move from India to Canada. They travel by cargo ship with many of the animals from their zoo which are now being shipped to other zoos around the world. The cargo ship sinks, leaving Pi stranded on a lifeboat with a few animals who escaped the ship. He spends 227 days on the ocean, his thoughts taken up by survival: how to get food, how to get fresh water, how to avoid being eaten by the 450-pound Bengal tiger that shares his lifeboat. It's a classic man-versus-nature story, and if you enjoy movies like Castaway you will probably like this book as well. Unfortunately, a book that could have been awesome, sunk together with the boat. * SPOILER * The fact that the mighty tiger didn't do anything at all is really ridiculous... I really enjoyed reading this book - and I loved that I had to double-check that it was finished when I was done. Loved the end!
Granted, it may not qualify as ''a story that will make you believe in God,'' as one character describes it. But it could renew your faith in the ability of novelists to invest even the most outrageous scenario with plausible life -- although sticklers for literal realism, poor souls, will find much to carp at.
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