Thursday, May 31, 2012

Aminals Falling

Book Review

There were three parts to the Life of Pi and they were all very different from each other. The first section of the book talks about Pi's life before he left home. In this section we get descriptions of the Pondicherry Zoo, which where he spent most of his time during his childhood.  In the second section, Pi describes his journey from when the ship sinks to when he is saved. This section shows the struggles of Pi while stuck on a boat with animals, very little food and a limited water supply. In the third section Pi is being interviewed by two men about his story on the lifeboat. During the third part of the book, Pi tells his story (the story that is vividly described during part two), but the reporters don't believe him. Pi tells them a different, slightly more believable story that is extremely disturbing and sad, which involves no animals like the story he told before. The reader doesn't ever find out which story is true or whether either one is true. The ending leaves you wondering what really happened.
In my opinion, the whole book was a metaphor for God. Throughout the book, Pi has been telling an incredible story about coexisting with a hyena, orangutan, and zebra for a short period of time and with a tiger for over 200 days at sea. At the end of the story, he tells the same story again, but with humans instead of animals. The things that have happened to the animals happen exactly to the humans. The roll of the orangutan was played by his mom, the hyena played by a french chef, the zebra a sailor, and the tiger was Pi. This means Pi watched his mother being brutally murdered by the chef instead of an orangutan being killed by a lion. Instead of a hyena taking off a zebra's leg to eat, the chef took off a sailor's leg to eat. Pi killed the chef, and then was completely and totally alone for over 200 days. He explains to two men that both stories have the same outcome, so which would a person rather believe? They reply "the one with the animals." Pi replies, "and so it is with God." Religion played a big part in this book. In fact, this story was promised to make us believe in God. Nobody wants to believe the human story, so a lot of people take the leap of faith and believe in the story featuring animals. I don't think it matters which really happened. I don't think that's what the author intended. I think the author wanted to make a point about taking the leap of faith and believing in the animal story because it's better.

The Life of Pi?



An eroding indian boy struggling with the pacific,
The company he keeps is what is in question,
a floating, passively carnivorous algae island,
Who knows if it ever existed? logic says otherwise,
An omega tiger, its seasickness, Pi's life line,
Was this tiger, in reality, Pi himself?
A metaphor for life? Where does god stand
in this tale with two stories?
humans or animals?
One tells a tale that is easier and harder to believe simultaneously,
 That one I believe is the true version,
It takes a leap of faith in god to believe that 
animals could ever coincidentally kill each other and Pi could ever survive, does this mean that the story with humans is sadder
and therefore we choose to believe the one with animals?
If so, we have a long way to go,
before life could be truly equal

Friday, May 25, 2012

Metacarnivorous



                               Pi's transformation