Yann Martel was born in Spain in 1963 of Canadian parents. Life of Pi won the 2002 Man Booker Prize and has been translated into more than forty languages. A #1 New York Times bestseller, it spent eighty-seven weeks on the list and was adapted to the screen by Ang Lee. He is also the author of the novels Beatrice and Virgil and Self, the collection of stories The Facts Behind the Helsinki Roccamatios, and a collection of letters to the prime minister of Canada, 101 Letters to a Prime Minister. He lives in Saskatchewan, Canada.
Biography
Sometime in the early 1990s, Yann Martel stumbled across a critique in The New York Times Review of Books by John Updike that captured his curiosity. Although Updike's response to Moacyr Scliar's Max and the Cats was fairly icy and indifferent, the premise immediately intrigued Martel. According to Martel, Max and the Cats was, "as far as I can remember... about a zoo in Berlin run by a Jewish family. The year is 1933 and, not surprisingly, business is bad. The family decides to emigrate to Brazil. Alas, the ship sinks and one lone Jew ends up in a lifeboat with a black panther." Whether or not the story was as uninspiring as Updike had indicated in his review, Martel was both fascinated by this premise and frustrated that he had not come up with it himself.
Ironically, Martel's account of the plot of Max and the Cats wasn't completely accurate. In fact, in Scliar's novel, Max Schmidt did not belong to a family of zookeepers -- he was the son of furrier. Furthermore, he did not emigrate from Berlin to Brazil with his family as the result of a failing zoo, but was forced to flee Hamburg after his lover's husband sells him out to the Nazi secret police. So, this plot that so enthralled Martel -- which he did not pursue for several years because he assumed Moacyr Scliar had already tackled it -- was more his own than he had thought.
Meanwhile, Martel managed to write and publish two books: a collection of short stories titled The Facts Behind the Helsinki Roccamatios in 1993 and a novel about gender confusion called Self in 1996. Both books sold only moderately well, further frustrating the writer. In an effort to collect his thoughts and refresh his creativity, he took a trip to India, first spending time in bustling Bombay. However, the overcrowded city only furthered Martel's feelings of alienation and dissolution. He then decided to move on to Matheran, a section near Bombay but without that city's dense population. In this peaceful hill station overlooking the city, Martel began revisiting an idea he had not considered in some time, the premise he had unwittingly created when reading Updike's review in The New York Times Review of Books. He developed the idea even further away from Max and the Cats. While Scliar's novel was an extended holocaust allegory, Martel envisioned his story as a witty, whimsical, and mysterious meditation on zoology and theology. Unlike Max Schmidt, Pi Patel would, indeed, be the son of a zookeeper. Martel would, however, retain the shipwrecked-with-beasts theme from Max and the Cats. During an ocean exodus from India to Canada, the ship sinks and Pi finds himself stranded on a lifeboat with such unlikely shipmates as a zebra, a hyena, and a Bengal tiger named Richard Parker.
The resulting novel, Life of Pi, became the smash-hit for which Martel had been longing. Selling well over a million copies and receiving the accolades of Book Magazine, Publisher's Weekly, Library Journal, and, yes, The New York Times Review of Books, Life of Pi has been published in over 40 countries and territories, in over 30 languages. It is currently in production by Fox Studios with a script by master-of-whimsy Jean-Pierre Jeunet (City of Lost Children; Amélie) and directorial duties to be handled by Alfonso Cuarón (Y tu mamá también; Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban).
Martel is now working on his third novel, a bizarrely allegorical adventure about a donkey and a monkey that travel through a fantastical world... on a shirt. Well, at least no one will ever accuse him of borrowing that premise from any other writer.
MORE THAN SEVEN MILLION COPIES SOLD
New York Times Bestseller
• Los Angeles Times Bestseller
• Washington Post Bestseller
• San Francisco Chronicle Bestseller
• Chicago Tribune Bestseller
"A story to make you believe in the soul-sustaining power of fiction."—Los Angeles Times Book Review
After the sinking of a cargo ship, a solitary lifeboat remains bobbing on the wild blue Pacific. The only survivors from the wreck are a sixteen-year-old boy named Pi, a hyena, a wounded zebra, an orangutan—and a 450-pound royal bengal tiger. The scene is set for one of the most extraordinary and beloved works of fiction in recent years.
Universally acclaimed upon publication, Life of Pi is a modern classic.
Winner of the 2002 Man Booker Prize
發表於2024-12-28
Life of Pi 2024 pdf epub mobi 電子書 下載
1、這是一個16歲男孩和一隻成年孟加拉虎在一艘救生船上共同漂流227天的奇幻故事。書的封皮上說:這是一個能讓你産生信仰的故事。我沒能産生信仰,但産生思索。 2、這本小說嚴重教訓瞭我不喜歡先看作者序言的臭毛病!不先看序就會為我的閱讀樂趣交上一大筆時間的學費! 3、結構...
評分Life of Pi是一本我特彆喜歡的書。2002年Man Booker奬的獲奬書,這本書帶給我的將是終身難忘的閱讀體驗。 一個13歲的男孩Pi,在從印度到美國的海上行程中不幸遭遇海難,他的傢人(父母和一個弟弟)全部遇難,Pi僥幸地落到一艘救生艇中,開始瞭獨自一人在太平洋中漂流瞭三百多...
評分若不是因為布剋奬的緣故,我很可能會將之當成一本講圓周率的數學普及讀本而不幸錯過。然而圓周率也未嘗同整本小說沒有關聯,Yann Martel在一篇采訪中說:“我選擇Pi這個名字,是因為這是個不理性(irrational)的數字,然而科學傢們還是利用這個不理性的數字達成對宇宙的理性認...
評分"Life of Pi" is just a fun read with quite a few memorable details, but on the whole the author is still immature as a writer in that, he tries too hard to mask the "truth" with gimmicks in story-telling, and he loses sight of the real depth of the truth, a...
評分1,為什麼說這是一個能讓你相信上帝的故事? 相信有動物的那個故事,和相信上帝,在本質上是一個道理的。 相信上帝並不是因為有確切的證據證明上帝的存在,而是在事實並沒有支持,事實甚至在反對這種信念的時候(日心說,演化論及其他)仍然相信,不然這就不是信仰,...
圖書標籤: EnglishOriginal 美國 文學 小說 書籍 ★ YannMartel English
"And so it goes with God."
評分結局非常震撼瞭。兩個故事,兩種感動。特彆是豬腳殺死廚子那段。人性都是本善的,無奈環境,無奈生存的迫切
評分最好的勸教書。
評分書裏的richard parker怎麼看怎麼就是一隻呆萌得會把爪子放進鯊魚嘴裏的橘黃色大貓。五星原著,三星電影。自然法則和宗教裏的輪迴是故事的兩大主題。我覺得電影裏pi作為一個素食者第一次被迫吃肉實在需要更多心理刻畫。
評分結局非常震撼瞭。兩個故事,兩種感動。特彆是豬腳殺死廚子那段。人性都是本善的,無奈環境,無奈生存的迫切
Life of Pi 2024 pdf epub mobi 電子書 下載