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Jon Krakauer, "The Alaska Interior" and "The Stampede Trail," Selections from Into the Wild
I was haunted by the particulars of the boy's starvation and by vague, unsettling parallels between events in his life and those in my own. Unwilling to let McCandless go, I spent more than a year retracing the convoluted path that led to his death in the Alaskan taiga, chasing down details of his peregrinations with an interest that bordered on obsession. In trying to understand McCandless, I inevitably came to reflect on other, larger subjects as well: the grip wilderness has on the American imagination, the allure high-risk activities hold for young men of a certain mind, the complicated, highly charged bond that exists between fathers and sons. Retracing McCandless's journey, Krakauer meditates not only on what it means to be a man at the end of the twentieth century but also, more generally, on the place of the natural world in contemporary society. After completing Into the Wild, Krakauer set off to study the tourist industry's guided climbs up Mount Everest. Into Thin Air, which also became an instant bestseller, is Krakauer's firsthand account of his experiences on a disastrous trip up Mount Everest that left nine climbers dead. The fact that this tragedy could easily have been avoided by staying down off the mountain has not escaped Krakauer's attention: "[W]hen I got back from Everest, I couldn't help but think that maybe I'd devoted my life to something that isn't just selfish and vainglorious and pointless, but actually wrong. There's no way to defend it, even to yourself, once you've been involved in something like this disaster. And yet I've continued to climb." Why do people embark on such adventures? What are they looking for? What is it they hope to achieve? These are the questions that animate Krakauer's writing; they are also the questions that he continues to try to answer for himself. Krakauer, Jon. "The Alaska Interior" and "The Stampede Trail," Into the Wild. New York: Random House,
1996. 157-199.
Links To Explore:Letters to Outside Magazine: responses to Krakauer's original article about Chris McCandless, "Death of an Innocent." Into Thin Air: Krakauer's September 1996 article for Outside Magazine recounting his climb of Mount Everest and the deaths of nine of his companions. Outward Bound: a web site devoted to describing programs for individuals all over the world who wish to explore the environment and themselves. Alaska/ Yukon/ Northwest Territories: A Graduate Student Retraces McCandless' Steps: an essay by Tom Boettger, a graduate student in Physics at Montana State University, documenting his travels through the same land McCandless and Krakauer explored. Questions for Learning:
Questions for Connecting:
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