Life of Pi

Yann MartelYann Martel, 2007.

Life of Pi, novel written by Yann Martel, published in 2001.

A fantasy which won the Booker Prize in 2002, Life of Pi tells the magical story of a young Indian, who finds himself shipwrecked and lost at sea in a large lifeboat. His companions are four wild animals: an orangutan, a zebra, a hyena, and, most notably, Richard Parker, a Bengal tiger .

Soon there remains only Pi and the tiger, and Pi’s only purpose in the next 227 days is to survive the shipwreck and the hungry tiger, supported by his own curious brand of religion, an eclectic mixture of Christianity, Islam and Buddhism. His syncretic approach has caused controversy within his family: his mother instructed him, for example, that heaven is “one nation under the sky,” requiring him to believe in one religion—“Or none,” she adds. “There’s that option too, you know.” Yet Pi’s survival schedule, carefully detailed while riding the waves with Richard Parker, contains plenty of time for prayer.

The perhaps allegorical tale, with its allusions to William Blake’s renowned poem “The Tyger,” is told in retrospect by Pi, and the author to whom he tells it, and Martel interrupts the narrative with his commentary and observations. Through this adventure, Martel depicts the rich cultural background of Pi’s world and the lonely struggle of taming the savagery of nature “red in tooth and claw” and surviving life. The role of spirituality in understanding and transcending the physical world is explored, along the way touching on why the Bengal tiger Richard Parker bears his unlikely name.

Martel’s novel was adapted as a 2012 film directed by Ang Lee.

Gabrielle Mander