Life of Pi
2001 · Yann Martel · 319 pages · Literary Fiction
Yann Martel's Booker Prize winner is a survival story that doubles as a philosophical puzzle about the nature of belief. The ocean sections are taut and vivid, the relationship between Pi and the Bengal tiger Richard Parker is unlike anything else in fiction, and the ending reframes everything that came before in a way that has fueled debate for over two decades. The early philosophical sections test patience, and some readers find the novel's argument about faith heavy-handed, but the central survival narrative is gripping enough to carry even skeptical readers to its unforgettable conclusion.