You can write about it about poetry and short stories, but before you experience it you will never really understand the beauty of life until you are immersed in it. Everyone has their own needs, needs, and desires. But until you go out and do what you imagine, you really find what you like. Everyone has their own way of thinking, and everyone can share different perspectives. If you ask everyone in the world what they think about the meaning of life, you will get some answers.
Jon Krakauer's entry into Chris Chris McCandless is only a victim of his own obsession. John Crascal 's novel "Into the Wild" reveals the life of a young, clever man named Chris McCandless who died in Alaska in the summer of 1992. In the novel, John Clark carefully approaches the life of McCandless without too many authors. Reader Chris McCandless is still an elusive character in the novel, but I can see that Chris McCandless is a dreamlike young idealist trying to obey his dreams. But I failed because his innocent mistake turned out to be fatal and irreversible.
Author Jon Krakauer tells the story of a young man named Chris McCandless with his novel "Into the Wild". This novel describes a poor but encouraging event that led to the death of Chris McCandless. Jon Krakauer explains the dangerous journey from McCandless to Alaska using vivid images, specific jargon, and suspense. In Chapter 2 of "Entering the Wilderness", Krakow began to explain the unique landscape of Alaska. Krakauer's detailed graphical language makes Alaska realistic. Krakauer added the explanation for the weather and the conclusion for strengthening the image of this chapter from White of Jack London. In this landscape "There are brown spruce forests on both sides of the frozen waterway, the wind covered recently with frost blows off trees" (9). Alaska is described as "wild, savage, cold north wilderness" (9).
In the book "Into the Wild", the writer Jon Klapau depicts the story of a young man named Chris McCandless. It turned out that he was hungry after a month. I could not tell the exact story that Chris himself actually experienced, but Cracow began talking about Chris' life and understanding Chris' desire alongside the desire of the author to climb the devil 's thumb. Mountains of Alaska