The book is introduced as a story born
of an interview suggestion given to the author during his trip to India
after the lackluster success of his first book. The story of this
shipwrecked man is said to be a story to make you believe in God.
The first section of the book is about Piscine Patel's youth in
Pondicherry, India. His name, correctly pronounced "peeseen" was
too often reduced to "pissing" when he moved to a new school, just
before the teacher called his name, he lept to the chalkboard and wrote
his name as "Pi" Patel. His father owns a zoo in the city park,
so much of his life is spent with animals and two of his statements are
important for the book. The first is that animals want stability,
which is not easy in the wild. In the zoo, however, they are fed
regularly and have a distinct territory free from worry, a parallel to
humans, who shut ourselves in houses and jobs when we could be free to
roam. In fact, he notes that animals that escape usually want to
come back. The second statement is that animals are very
adaptable, and claims that if you "shook Tokyo upside down you would be
amazed at the [menagerie] that would fall out".
Most of the description of his youth, however, was spent in his
discovery of religion. Pi was an adherent to three major
religions: Christianity, Islam, and Hinduism. From
Christianity he learned that God is so generous that he gave his life
for us. From Islam he learns devotion to God. From Hinduism
he learns that God is in everything. Although the three religions
are seen as mutually exclusive by their adherents, Pi does not view
them that way, synchretizing them in the apparent belief that none of
them fully represent God.
Eventually Pi's family decides that the Mrs. Ghandi's New India is not
for them and they sell the zoo animals to various places in the
America's. They hire a cargo boat to transport themselves and the
cargo across the Pacific, with the aim to settle in Canada.
Unfortunately, the ship suddenly sinks after leaving Manila, and he is
left destitute on a lifeboat with only himself, a Bengal tiger, a
female orangutan (sadly, without the bananas she had been floating on),
a zebra with a broken leg, and a hyena. The zebra is slowly eaten
alive by the hyena over a period of several days. The orangutan
was quickly killed, as her zoo upbringing had not taught her the
subtleties of fighting. Shortly thereafter the tiger, named
Richard Parker after the hunter who had captured him after killing his
rampaging mother, dispatched the hyena, who gave up without a fight.
Pi was left Richard Parker as his sole companion, and Pi fled the
lifeboat to a small raft he cobbled together from available
materials. The lifeboat had a number of cans of water and food
rations, some floating water stills for distilling seawater, some
orange whistles, a few hooks and fishing line, and a book on survival
in a lifeboat. Pi derived most of his sustenance from the fish he
caught and began giving some of the fish and distilled water to Richard
Parker.
After a while Pi decided that he needed to be able to habit the boat
and he began training Richard Parker. The key, he said, was to
show Richard Parker that Pi was the super-alpha male, thus gaining
Richard Parker's submission. This he proceeded to do by creating
an association between the sound of the whistle and Richard Parker's
nausea when the extension of Pi's raft caused the lifeboat to catch the
waves more heavily. Pi knew that he had succeeded when he won a
fight over a fish by staring Richard Parker down and they settled down
into divided boat, with Richard Parker's territory being under the
tarpaulin that covered half the boat.
After this Pi mostly subsisted without incident, until the salt caused
him and Richard Parker to go blind. At this point he met a French
cook, also adrift, and also blind. They talked about food.
The Frenchman came aboard Pi's boat, but had the misfortune to slip
into Richard Parker's territory, and that was the end of the
Frenchman. Soon a rain came that washed away Pi's blindness.
Shortly after this the boat made landfall on a floating island.
The island was inhabited solely by a large amount of meerkats (which
Richard Parker ate many of), with a freshwater lake, created by the
desalination action of the seaweed comprising much of the island, in
the middle that newly dead (and eatable) fish floated up in. The
solution to the mystery of the dead fish, why Richard Parker always
returned to the lifeboat each evening, and why the meerkats slept in
the trees was solved when Pi discovered some fruit in one of the
trees. The "fruit" was thickly wrapped leaves containing a full
set of human teeth. Pi verified that the island was carnivorous,
as the lake and island floor turned into acid after nightfall so that
the island could digest its kills. Pi realized that while he
could leave a pleasant life like the meerkats, to stay would be
spiritual death, so he and Richard Parker left, arriving on the South
American shore sometime thereafter, after a trip of 227 days.
In the third part, two Japanese from the company that owned the ship
question Pi to try to determine why the ship sank. Since none of
the crew spoke English and Pi had only accidentally woken up in time to
escape the ship, he could not inform them. The Japanese did not
believe his story and repeatedly asked him to tell the truth.
They said they wanted a real story, a story without animals, a story
that was believable. So Pi told a short story about how he, his
mother, a Chinese sailor, and a French cook escaped to the
lifeboat. The cook (the hyena) slowly ate the sailor (the zebra),
eventually killing Pi's mother (the orangutan). Pi (the tiger)
was incensed at this and killed the cook, who seemed to let himself be
killed out of shame.
The crux of the book comes when Pi asks the Japanese men which story
they like better. They reply that they like the first one best,
whereupon Pi replies that since they cannot know which one is true
(Richard Parker had left for the jungle immediately after the lifeboat
had grounded--"and they thought they could--hah--find a tiger in the
middle of a jungle! Ha, ha!"), why not choose the better
story? Then, in one short sentence, he reveals the purpose of the
book, adding parenthetically, "And so it is with God." Their
final report says that the cause of the sinking is unknown, but notes
that the sole survivor has an amazing tale of survival on the Pacific.
Which tale is true? Clearly the first one is not credible,
because a large floating island could not have gone unnoticed in the
middle twentieth century. The second story is much more
believable, and the trauma of his mother's death could have lead to the
creation of the original story. However, the second story is a
standard hardship-at-sea-leads-to-cannibalism story. Furthermore,
the narrative describes the second story as told after Pi got the
specifications of the story that the Japanese wanted, so it is possible
that neither is true and that Pi, in keeping with his view of God, does
not plan to tell the real one.
While
Life of Pi has an
engaging and interesting maritime tale, the book as a whole is somewhat
disappointing. Widely read readers will likely be able to ignore
the fact that there is no plot in the first half of the book on the
assumption that the author has a good reason for doing it that way, but
less eager readers may find it dull. Furthermore, the theme and
direction of the book are not revealed until one sentence at the very
end contrasts the two hundred fifty page introduction and narrative
with a brief, more believable but less compelling story. This
gives book the book a sort of "trick theme", à la short
stories, which, while good and expected for short stories, leave the
reader disillusioned in a novel. In fact, the novel structure is
not followed at all; there is no beginning, no rising action or
denoument, nor any real climax, because there is no plot for the first
hundred pages (although interesting vignettes) and little plot
(although fascinating descriptions) in the second part.
Is this a tale to make you believe in God? If the answer is that
since
God is unknowable, we should choose the best description of Him, the
best story about Him, then yes, the book certainly makes it easy to
believe in a God you want to believe in. However, if you are
looking for the real God, whoever He may be, that God does not make His
appearance known in this book.
Review: 7.5
The complete discarding of the novel
structure (in a book titled Life of
Pi: A Novel) and the "trick theme" really costs this
book. As written, the book would make a much better short story
(maybe 100 pages max) than a novel, it's structure is that of a short
story. Although the book contains a good story and is very
consistent, with some foreshadowing, little of the art of storytelling shows.
Ultimately, this is a bestseller, not a classic.
Interesting Pieces
- Flying fish travel in schools.
- Fantastic sea stories (e.g. Sindbad) always seem to include a
floating island (which is usually a large animal) and/or an island with
some sinister nature. This theme is even appropriated to space by
Lucas in "Star Wars", where the Millennium Falcon lands in a cave on an
asteroid which turns out to be a creature's mouth.
- Animals look for stability and zoos provide it; zoos are
not necessarily bad (due to the fictional nature of the book, this may
or may not be true, and is probably more true for animals with smaller
natural territories).
- Unlikely animals may live together peaceably if somehow the
aggressor sees the prey as part of the environment. The example
was given of some snakes that lived with a rat in their cage because is
somehow became part of the environment. Also the rhinoceri and
the goats in the zoo. (There is the potential that this is
fiction, too, but it could be a good element in a story nonetheless).