List of Deaths Wiki
List of Deaths Wiki
LifeOfPiBook

Life of Pi is a Canadian philosophical novel by Yann Martel published in 2001.

Victims[]

Part 1[]

  • Two Unnamed People - Eaten by an unknown puma.
  • Goat - Devoured by Richard Parker.
    • Total - 3

Part 2[]

Both Stories[]

  • Santosh Patel - Drowned in the sinking of the Tsimtsum.
  • Ravi Patel - Drowned in the sinking of the Tsimtsum.
    • Total - 2

Story 1[]

  • Unnamed Male Cook - Drowned in the sinking of the Tsimtsum.
  • Unnamed Male Sailor - Drowned in the sinking of the Tsimtsum.
  • Gita Patel - Drowned in the sinking of the Tsimtsum.
  • The Zebra - Stomach and neck ripped open, then had all of its intestines and organs ripped out and eaten from the inside by the hyena.
  • Orange Juice (Orang-utan) - Throat bitten multiple times until she was decapitated by the Hyena.
  • The Hyena - Neck bitten and broken by Richard Parker with his teeth.
  • Fish - Neck accidentally ripped open by Pi.
  • Fish - Head smashed by Pi with the butt of a hatchet.
  • Turtle - Stabbed in the throat and sliced open by Pi.
  • Unnamed Frenchman Castaway - Throat ripped apart by Richard Parker.
    • Total - 10

Story 2[]

  • Unnamed Male Sailor - Died shortly after his leg was amputated by the Cook, who then ate him.
  • Turtle - Cut open and eaten by the Cook.
  • Gita Patel - Stabbed multiple times in the chest by the Cook with a kitchen knife, who then ate her.
  • Unnamed Male Cook - Stabbed through the neck by Pi with a kitchen knife, who then ate him.
    • Total - 4

Part 3[]

  • None

Deaths[]

  • Total - 19
    • Part 1 - 3
    • Part 2 - 12
      • Both Stories - 2
      • Story 1 - 10
      • Story 2 - 4
    • Part 3 - 0

Group Deaths[]

  • Total - 19
    • 11 Humans
      • 7 Men
      • 2 Women
      • 2 Victims of Unknown Gender
    • 8 Animals
      • 2 Fish
      • 2 Turtles
      • 1 Zebra
      • 1 Orang-utan
      • 1 Hyena
      • 1 Goat

Kill Counts[]

  1. Piscine Molitor "Pi" Patel - 4 (Alive)
  2. Richard Parker (Bengal Tiger) - 3 (Alive)

Notes[]

  • It is up for reader interpretation as to which story is true.