Chris though his journey was often very rude and disrespectful towards people, and the government. An example of his rudeness was when Chris left Franz. Franz is a character who lost his family in a car crash, he went through a lough of greff and suffering, and a large hole was missing in his heart. After spending roughly a month with Chris, Franz, began to deeply care for Chris. When Chris left Franz for his trip to alaska Franz told Chris, ““when i'm gone, my family will be finished, gone forever. so i asked alex if i could adopt him, if he would be my grandson.” McCandless, uncomfortable with the request, dodged the question: “we'll talk about it when i get back from alaska, ron.” On March 14, Franz left McCandless on the shoulder of interstate …show more content…
Chris deeply hurt Franz when he left and did not return, this shows how his attitude towards people were for his own self interest and were not thought through. Alex aso did not tell his parents where he was and whether or not he was even ok, this put a tremendous amount of stress on his parents. When he was asked about his family would often avoid the question or make a snarky comment. When Gallien asked Chris about his family to see if Chris had anyone that will know if something when wrong, Chris answered, “no, nobody knew of his plans, that in fact he hadn’t spoken to his family in nearly two years. “I’m absolutely positive, “he assures Gallien, “I won’t run into anything i can’t deal with on my own“ (6). Chris uses his issues with his family as a excuse to do what he wants and to disconnect with people. Another bad trate that Chris has is his disrespect for laws meant to keep people safe, and the environment safe. At the start of chris journey, he had a yellow car that he drove in to a flash flood
After that accident, Chris realized that what he was doing was destroying his life. He didn’t have a relationship with his children and his wife didn’t talk to him. The drug addict went to a rehabilitation
Feeling like an outcast to society Chris McCandless takes off on a journey Into the Wild without looking back but what comes with that is a fatal ending that he can’t foresee. Percy Shelley the author of In Defense of Poetry writes about how he invokes metaphors from nature to characterize his relationship to art. “A man, to be greatly good, must imagine intensely and comprehensively; he must put himself in the place of another and of many others.(Shelly) Chris McCandless throughout his whole journey only looks out for himself and nobody else. Nor does he care for how his parents feel and the greatest betrayal he caused was with his sister in which he kept in contact with through the mail. But as his journey grew near the end he stopped keeping
Although not as substantial as the impact left on the Burres’s or Ron Franz, Chris is still able to leave a great impact on Tracy. As Jan describes her “she was this sweet little thing… the daughter of a couple of tramps who parked their rig four vehicles down” (Krakauer 44). Jan then goes on to explain that Tracy fell hopelessly in love with Alex. Jan says “she fell in love with McCandless during his week-long visit…and poor Tracy developed a hopeless crush on Alex. The whole time he was in Niland, she hung around making goo-goo eyes at him, bugging me to convince him to go on walks with her. Alex was nice to her, but she was too young for him. He couldn’t take her seriously. Probably left her broken hearted for a whole week at least” (Krakauer 44). Here,
It is impossible to fully apprehend what was going through Chris’s mind and how it worked. But we can grasp that his resentment towards his father was deep. He was predetermined to become someone so different from his father because Chris didn’t care for or look up to the kind of person he was. Although he respected how he came up from nothing and made something of himself.
When Mccandless dies it causes his family great pain. In the passage it proves that they are still suffering after Chris’s death. “Ten months after Chris’s death, Carine still grieves deeply for her brother. ‘I can’t seem to get through a day without crying.’” (129) This passage proves that Chris causes his family pain, his whole family still grieves over his death. People think that the family is always happy, when in reality they have a daily struggle which is corrupting the family. No family should have to go through the pain of losing a child. Losing a family member destroys families. If their father would not have had a secret relationship with Marcia, Chris never would have went off grid.He chose to do this because of all the pain that
No individual had the same family background and early experiences in their lives. Each individual also had their own personalities. Chris McCandless was a young and successful college graduate with a job and had money. Oddly, he decided to disappear in response to his father’s misjudgment, giving away his money and overall, became homeless. McCandless could no longer
The book states,” some readers admired the boy immensely for his courage and noble ideas.” It takes bravery to do what Chris did. He didn’t agree with how society wanted people to live, so he took action to change his living conditions. As stated in the book, “No, thanks anyway, “Alex replied,” I’ll be fine with what I’ve got.” This goes to show Chris is an independent person. He wanted to accomplish his goal of living in the wilderness with little to no aid. “There was just no talking the guy out of it.” This demonstrates Chris’ drive to live in the wild. He had a goal, and was not going to stop till he achieved it. Thus, Chris was a determined independent
On Chris’s journey across the western United States, he met a special friend named Franz. Franz took Chris under his wing;treated him like his own son. He did this by feeding him, sheltering him, and giving him rides for a particular time. Franz gave Chris rides from Salton City, California to Grand Junction, Colorado. Franz was a generous man for having such a terrible past time. The book concludes in the text Franz did not have a cheerful past. The novel states Franz’s only child and wife died in an automobile accident. The loss of his loved ones really discouraged his present state of mind.
There is a strong sense of emotion when Chris is leaving Wayne Westerberg’s farm for the last time, and we learn that he is exceptional at playing the piano. A skill, that we decipher, had been honed to perfection after countless years of practice. When he cries at the point of his departure the next morning, his tears invoke a sense of his own knowledge of the risks he is taking which is when his friends “started to have a bad feeling that we wouldn’t see Alex again,” (Krakauer, 24). He is clearly well liked and people wished to get to know him more because he had the capacity to create joy in others, an element of pathos that we feel as a result of his
During Chris’s journey he never really opens up to anyone about his family. He doesn’t really show any affection towards them and if any it would be toward his sister Carnie. He writes in a letter to her stating that he is going to divorce his parents. The last time his parents saw him was after his graduation. Chris told his parents “ I think I’m going to disappear for a while” and that is the last they ever heard of him again.
Chris felt deceived and let down because of his father’s infidelity to both of his wives. Carine says in her interview with Krakauer, “When Walt’s double life came to light, the revelations inflicted deep wounds. All parties suffered terribly” (121). This is a perfect example of how the affair affected the McCandless family, thus giving him a major motivation to leave his parents. Another perspective of the father and son conflict in Into the Wild was between Chris and an elderly man that he met on the road named Ronald Franz. Ron Franz, whom was a father figure of sorts to Chris, felt a sense of treachery from his heavenly father, and this was all due to Chris’ elusion of close relationships. “I decided I couldn’t believe in a God who would let something that terrible happen to a boy like Alex” (60). That was a father son conflict on more of a spiritual level in the book, and it is clear that Chris had such a large impact on Franz. His impact on Ronald Franz was so compelling, that he even offered to adopt Chris, only to be rejected, which was also an underhanded sort of betrayal on Chris’ part. Krakauer added this element to the book because once there is betrayal, the casualty is
On the other hand, for those he did care about, he left a positive impact on their lives. Chris was raised in an environment where“...hideous domestic violence hidden behind a mask of prosperity and propriety” (Mcalpin). While some believe that going to Alaska was a way to take revenge on his parents, it is hard to imagine those actions taken by Chris who is someone independent and holds neoteric ideals. It is more presumable to suppose that Chris just wanted to cut off ties to those he thinks contravenes with his ideals and ambitions. On the other hand, for everyone he met on the journey, he built a positive relationship; he maintained those relationships up until his death, even telling Wayne, “‘Till then I’ll always think of you as a friend” (Krakauer 33). He consistently sent postcards and shared his current status and new thoughts to Ron, Wayne, and Jan Burres. In his long letter to Ron detailing his pilgrimage, he gave heartfelt thanks and sincere hopes to see him again, writing “Ron, I really enjoy all the help you have given me and the times that we spent together….But providing that I get through this Alaskan Deal in one piece you will be hearing from me again in the future” (Krakauer 56). What makes this letter so special is the fact that Chris
Some say that Chris was an idiot for going out into the Alaskan wilderness unprepared and without any knowledge of nature. “Why would anyone intending to live off the land for a few months forget boy scout rule number one: Be prepared” (krakauer, 71). This was a complaint sent in by a Alaskan hunter, and there were many more that followed that. The people writing the negative comments all believed that Chris either wanted attention, was stupid, or went out on a suicide mission. However, Chris was none of those things, he wouldn’t have been able to survive 113 days off
Chris is an Ignorant person for several reasons, such as the several poor misguided decision he made throughout his journey. In Chapter 8, Nick James an Alaskan native quotes, “Such willful Ignorant… amounts of disrespect for the land, and paradoxically demonstrates the same sort of arrogance that resulted in the Exxon Valdez Spill just another case of underprepared…”(72). This quote shows the Alaskan viewpoint of
Chris is a charismatic young man, but takes extensive measures to ensure he does not become too close with anyone. By going out into the wild without so much as a letter to his parents,