The Life of Pi
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The Life of Pi
Has anybody read The Life of Pi? What are your thoughts on it? See any similarities to TCTC?
Yann Martel. Won the Booker Prize. I haven't read it, but I've heard it involves a guy stuck on a raft with a tiger in the middle of the ocean.
Halfway down the stairs Is the stair where I sit. There isn't any other stair quite like it. I'm not at the bottom, I'm not at the top; So this is the stair where I always stop.
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I've read it. It was good. It is about an Indian boy who's father owned a zoo. They are shipping the animals to America. On the way, the boat sinks, and the only things that escape on a life boat are: a Zebra with a broken leg, a Hyena (or maybe it was a jackal), an Orangutan, a Tiger and the boy (i'm pretty sure that was all). I thought it was really good, it focused mainly on the Psychological issues. I sort of guessed the twist at the end, but that didn't make it any less enjoyable.
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"Their pheremones fizzled like ice cream and lemonade" - Harvie Krumpet
"I'll move on when I'm ready to" - Reservoir Dogs
"Their pheremones fizzled like ice cream and lemonade" - Harvie Krumpet
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It's a fun and enjoyable read, and its being made into a movie soon. A lot of metaphor and deep thinking can be put into this book, what does the tiger represent, etc... Being adrift is a metaphor or simile for etc....It's a nice book club read if you have a bunch of people who are into examining a nice read. Cheers adn enjoy.
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Just got done reading this and it is a fantastic book.
Pi Patel is a kid from India whose father is a zookeeper and who is a practicing Hindu, Muslim, and Christian all at the same time, to the chagrin of the local religious leaders.
He finds truths in all three and is unwilling to give any of them up.
When Pi is in his midteens, his father decides to close the zoo and move the family to Canada. Most of the animals are sold to zoos in America. The family travels on the same cargo ship as the animals, to take care of them.
The ship sinks. Pi finds himself on a small lifeboat with the animals mentioned before:
a zebra with the broken leg
a male hyena
a sweet female orangutan named Orange Juice
a male tiger named Richard Parker
The story is filled with metaphors, plus it is an interesting survival story.
Spirituality, survival, and a tiger. What's not to like?

Pi Patel is a kid from India whose father is a zookeeper and who is a practicing Hindu, Muslim, and Christian all at the same time, to the chagrin of the local religious leaders.


When Pi is in his midteens, his father decides to close the zoo and move the family to Canada. Most of the animals are sold to zoos in America. The family travels on the same cargo ship as the animals, to take care of them.
The ship sinks. Pi finds himself on a small lifeboat with the animals mentioned before:
a zebra with the broken leg
a male hyena
a sweet female orangutan named Orange Juice
a male tiger named Richard Parker
The story is filled with metaphors, plus it is an interesting survival story.
Spirituality, survival, and a tiger. What's not to like?

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I tried reading it, and thought the writing itself was very good, but there was entirely too much time spent discussing religion, and I tired of it. One day when I have the time to sit and read a book straight through (haven't for years), I will try it again.
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"Now if you remember all great paintings have an element of tragedy to them. Uh, for instance if you remember from last week, the unicorn was stuck on the aircraft carrier and couldn't get off. That was very sad. " - Kids in the Hall
"Now if you remember all great paintings have an element of tragedy to them. Uh, for instance if you remember from last week, the unicorn was stuck on the aircraft carrier and couldn't get off. That was very sad. " - Kids in the Hall
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I loved this book. Never saw the twist comming, I never do, get too absorbed into the story to think about what is going to happen next. I was very shocked at the end, and found myself thinking about it for days after I finished it. I still think on it sometimes and I am glad that others also enjoyed reading it. I found the style of writting to be very much to my taste. I recomend reading this book to anyone.
Man, surrounded by facts, permitting himself No surprise,
No intuitive flash,
No great hypothesis,
No risk,
Is in a locked cell.
Ignorance cannot seal the mind and imagination more securely. -Albert Einstein
No intuitive flash,
No great hypothesis,
No risk,
Is in a locked cell.
Ignorance cannot seal the mind and imagination more securely. -Albert Einstein