Chris McCandless, alias Alexander Supertramp, was known for his high regard of nature. Chris lived for excitement, never skipping a chance at adventure, with a respect towards the nomadic lifestyle. In the book, Into the Wild, Jon Krakauer tells the story of how Chris divorced his parents to live in the wild. Living off the western land for 2 years, he grew an unassailable passion towards adventure and developed an individualistic personality. He began his last journey in the high-maintenance Alaskan terrain after his journey throughout the west. After 100 days living off the land, nature caught up to him being unprepared, making him pay the ultimate price. Krakauer’s stories throughout the book and his order of chapters shows how Chris was an enthusiast, always eager for adventure.
His use of anecdotal
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Wayne Westerberg, a guy Chris worked for at the end and beginning of his two year journey in the west, believed, “He was the hardest worker I’ve ever seen,” proposing that Chris was up for any challenge, no matter the difficulty. This is definitely addressed in Into the Wild as Chris is somehow always taking on challenge upon challenge, never stopping to take a break. Unlike most people after a near death experience, hiding away and taking it easy, Chris saw it as a test that he had passed, giving him a new burst of arrogance. This may have led him to his eventual death, but it led him to live an exciting life; that of which most of us will never experience. He always was a hard worker, putting in 100% in everything that was important to him. In Krakauer's eyes Chris’ attitude remains the same from his school years to the years preceding his death. In school he was in the top of his class and always tried his best, which is similar to his attitude towards living off the land in Alaska. Once he set his mind on something, he put