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少年派里,第二个故事道理上似乎说不通啊……

这肯定是一个关于吃人的故事

我google了下Richard Parker这个名字

以下内容来自wiki
Richard Parker is the name of several people in real life and fiction who became shipwrecked, with some of them subsequently being cannibalised by their fellow seamen:

In Edgar Allan Poe's only novel The Narrative of Arthur Gordon Pym of Nantucket, published in 1838, Richard Parker is a mutinous sailor on the whaling ship Grampus. After the ship capsizes in a storm, he and three other survivors draw lots upon Parker's suggestion to kill one of them to sustain the others. Parker then gets cannibalized.
In 1846, the Francis Spaight foundered at sea. Apprentice Richard Parker was among the twenty-one drowning victims of that incident, though there were no cases of cannibalism.[1][2]
In 1884, the yacht Mignonette sank. Four people survived and drifted in a life boat before one of them, the cabin boy Richard Parker, was killed by the others for food. This led to the R v Dudley and Stephens criminal case.[3][4]
Another Richard Parker was involved in the Spithead and Nore mutinies in 1797 and subsequently hanged, but not eaten.[5]

Writer Yann Martel in his 2001 novel Life of Pi picked up on these occurrences, surmising "So many Richard Parkers had to mean something",[6] and included a shipwrecked Bengal tiger by the name of "Richard Parker" in the book.[7]

Playwright Owen Thomas wrote a play called "Richard Parker". The play was a dark comedy exploring the notion of coincidence.

"Mr Parker's Bones, or The Strange, Lamentable, Bloody, and mostly true History of Parker of Pear Tree Green and of his Captain, the Dastardly Cannibal Tom" was a site specific play produced by the Nuffield Theatre in the Old Magistrates Courts in Southampton. The play was an interactive reconstruction in a gothic style of the events and trial surrounding the fate of Richard Parker. The play was written by Russ Tunney and directed by Fran Morley.


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