New York Post

Now it's 'Out of the Wild'

Famed Alaska book ’n’ film bus gone

- By KENNETH GARGER

An abandoned bus in the Alaska wilderness that was made famous by the book and film “Into the Wild” has been removed from its long-standing site for “public safety” reasons.

An Army National Guard chopper on Thursday lifted the bus away from its old plot on state land (pictured) about a half-mile outside the Denali National Park and Preserve, Alaska Public Media reported.

“I know it’s the right thing for public safety in the area, removing the perilous attraction,” Denali Borough Mayor Clay Walker told the outlet. “At the same time, it’s always a little bitterswee­t when a piece of your history gets pulled out.”

The area where the bus sat has no cellphone service and is plagued by unpredicta­ble weather. Also nearby is the raging Teklanika River, whose swollen banks prevented Christophe­r McCandless — whose life is depicted in “Into the Wild” — from seeking help before his 1992 starvation death.

The bus and McCandless’ doomed trip hiking into the Alaska wilderness were first made famous in Jon Krakauer’s 1996 book, which in 2007 Sean Penn made into a film (inset).

McCandless spent 114 days inside the bus, journaling about his time there, before dying.

Over the years, hikers have braved the rough terrain to catch a glimpse of the historic bus, sometimes resulting in injuries and even death. Last year, a newlywed woman from Belarus died trying to reach the site.

From 2009 to 2017, there were 15 search-and-rescue operations related to the bus, Department of Natural Resources Commission­er Corri Feige told Alaska Public Media in a statement.

It’s unclear where the bus will end up, but Mayor Walker said it may go on display.

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