Quotes of the Day

Monday, Aug. 26, 2002

Open quoteThere are certain unbreakable laws to the survival story. Take an unlikely character, pluck him out of the anesthetized womb of daily life and toss him into a harsh environment. Test his physical endurance through hardship and privation, his will to live through isolation. And if at all possible, throw in a full-grown royal Bengal tiger.

Yann Martel's inspired novel Life of Pi is at its core a record of survival—and quite a record it is. Martel's protagonist, a 16-year-old Indian boy named Pi Patel, not only endures 227 days in the middle of the Pacific Ocean, but does so while sharing a lifeboat with a 200-kilogram tiger, which regards his shipmate as a tasty sea ration. More than mere physical endurance, however, Life of Pi is concerned with the difficult perseverance of the human spirit. The tiger is a threat to Pi's body, but then becomes the key to his spiritual survival in a sea of isolation.

Martel, a French-Canadian writer of gentle wit, lets Pi tell his own story in an engaging voice, starting with a wondrous childhood in Pondicherry, India, as the son of zoo owners. In his adolescence, Pi becomes promiscuously religious: he decides he wants to be Hindu, Muslim and Christian, devoutly and simultaneously. His pandit, his imam and his priest are less than pleased. Pi doesn't see the problem. Gandhi, he reminds them, said "all religions are true," and as for himself, he says, "I just want to love God."

LATEST COVER STORY
The Green Century
September 2, 2002
 

ASIA
 China: Devastating floods
 Asia's Child-Sex Industry
 Afghanistan: Our Friend's Enemy
 Malaysia: Taliban-style Laws?
 Korea: Pyongyang Yellow Pages
 Japan: The 'Kamikaze Mom'


ARTS
 Music: China's Woodstock
 Movies: Hollywood Hong Kong
 Interview: Director Fruit Chan
 Books: Life of Pi
 Books: My Jihad


TRAVEL
 China: Outdoor Art in Nanning


NOTEBOOK
 Person of the week
 Milestones


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Pi and his family decide to emigrate to Canada, zoo animals in tow, but their ship sinks into the Pacific, leaving Pi and the tiger—named Richard Parker due to circumstances that would take too long to describe here—bobbing in a lifeboat. With no escape for either, Pi must tame the tiger if they are both going to survive the sea.

Bengal tigers in lifeboats and Indian boys who worship Allah, Jesus and Hindu gods could easily become precious, but Martel saves his novel from saccharine whimsy by grounding it in hard reality. He doesn't stint on the bloody details of a tiger's diet, or the immense physical suffering Pi is forced to endure. Martel has done his homework: if a tiger and an Indian boy found themselves floating in the Pacific, this is how each would respond. Most importantly, Martel doesn't make the mistake of anthropomorphizing his tiger. Richard Parker is an animal and a killer, as Pi reminds himself again and again. That the beast is also a child of God and must be saved does not make him a human.

Life of Pi is a bit overballasted by these nautical chapters. "The worst pair of opposites, boredom and terror," writes Martel, stalk Pi throughout his ordeal; inevitably, boredom leaks into his story. Hemingway had his old man stay on the sea for a metaphorically appropriate three days; Pi floats for 227.

Martel's postmodern frame and half twist of an ending both reinforce his religious themes and inject a bracing dose of uncertainty. Is Pi a trustworthy raconteur? When the story is this satisfying, it doesn't really matter. Martel leaves all claims open-ended, like his protagonist's limitless faith. If Life of Pi is not quite a story to make you believe in God, it may convince you that when it comes to existence, we're all in the same boat.Close quote

  • Bryan Walsh
  • Yann Martel's novel Life of Pi strands a religious Indian boy and a Bengal tiger together in the middle of the Pacific
| Source: Yann Martel's novel Life of Pi strands a religious Indian boy and a Bengal tiger together in the middle of the Pacific