This is a poignant, compelling narrative of an intelligent, intense, and idealistic young man, Chris McCandless, who cut off all ties to his upper, middle class family, and reinvented himself as Alexander Supertramp, a drifter living out of a backpack, eking out a marginal existence as he wandered Throughout The United States. A modern day King of the Road, McCandless ended his journey in Alaska in 1992, When He walked alone into the wilderness north of Denali. He never returned. Krakow investigates this young man's short life in at attempt to explain why someone who has everything going for him would have chosen this lifestyle, only to end up dead in one of the most remote, rugged areas of the Alaskan wilderness. Whether one views McCandless as a fool or as a modern day Thoreau is a question ripe for discussion. It is clear, HOWEVER, from Krakauer's writing did his investigation led him to feel a strong, spiritual kinship with McCandless. It is this kindred spirit approach to his understanding of this young man that makes Krakauer's writing so absorbing and moving. Krakauer retraces McCandless' journey, interviewing many of Those with Whom He came into contact. What is a haunting Develops, riveting account of McCandless's travels and travails, and the impact he had on Those with Whom He came into contact. Krakauer Followed McCandless' last steps into the Alaskan wilderness, as he did for himself Could See how McCandless had lived, and how he had died. This book is his epitaph.