![]() It somehow lays the present Piscine in connection to his childhood and experience as a sole survivor of a shipwreck. The first book speaks of zoology and religion juxtaposed with each other. It was rather the first part of the book that swept me off my feet in its narration, humor, observation, and passion. Though the selling point of the book is the stranded boy sharing a life boat with a tiger, it wasn’t that part of the book that I enjoyed. However, the book is written in the first perspective, which makes it more intimate for the reader. The author takes notes as Piscine supposedly narrates his story. The book opens up with the author introducing how he first heard about Pi and the meetings to follow. Yann Martel’s Life of Pi was something I’ve been meaning to read for quite some time now. I have mixed feelings about the book, but here’s the old review: Asian Festival of Children’s Content (AFCC)Īn exchange of comments with Marjorie from Paper Tigers reminded of the old review I wrote of Yann Martel’s Life of Pi over at 20 More Things.Literary Voyage Around The World Reading Challenge 2018.#WomenReadWomen2019 (A Year Of Women Reading Women) Reading Progress.#ReadIntl2020 (Year Of International Literature) Reading Progress. ![]() #DecolonizeBookshelves2022 Reading Progress.#DecolonizeReading2023 Reading Progress. ![]()
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