Life of Pi Yann Martel Canongate Books, 2003
A Dip in the Biggest Swimming Pool of the All
I'll keep this review short: Life of Pi is the survival story of a teenaged boy lost at sea in a small lifeboat. With a fully-grown Bengal tiger.
Max and the Cats meets "A Passion in the Desert" meets Captain William Bligh's accounts of survival in an open boat. And, of course, any boy-and-best-friend-tiger story must contain a big philosophical drop of Calvin and Hobbes.
Fave bit: The way the novel's theme of viewing the world spiritually versus viewing it rationally are brought to a point, and a decision made. Very well done, and without any arty-farty bullshit.
Could have been done better: It takes Pi forever to get into the lifeboat. The novel did not need a lengthy discourse on the merits of sloths and the complete history of Pi's upbringing in his (admittedly interesting) corner of India.
Verdict: Critical Mick's book reviews contain corporate logo'ed comets smashing planets to pieces, cowardly vampires, obnoxious cross-dressing Civil Servants who save the world from tiny aliens, and celebrity novels dropping from the heavens like locust plagues. Of course he loves novels that contain giant meerkat-infested islands of carnivorous floating algae. Life of Pi rocks.
Yann Martel gets a secret message here!
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