Hunter, naturalist, and conservationist, Jim Corbett
is famous for slaying man-eating tigers and leopards in
the Kumaon region of northern India. Frequently appealed
to by the government of the United Provinces during the
1920s and the 1930s for help, Corbett is known to have
shot nineteen tigers and fourteen leopards-all
man-eaters. Corbett was encouraged to write about his
hunting experiences by Roy E. Hawkins, manager of the
Indian Branch of the Oxford University Press and a
personal friend. An integral part of OUP India's
centenary celebrations, this volume includes Jim
Corbett's unpublished writings on man-eaters, nature,
and his beloved Kumaon, personal letters, articles
written for newspapers and gazettes by his
contemporaries, and letters exchanged between Corbett
and his publisher showcasing the development of his
bestselling books-all from the archives of the Oxford
University Press. It highlights Corbett's engagement
with the times in which he lived, his complete empathy
with the people of Kumaon, his great understanding of
tigers and leopards, and also the gradual development of
his ideas about conservation and the need to preserve
the tiger and its habitat.Chronicling the history of his
bestselling books (Man-Eaters of Kumaon, The Man-Eating
Leopard of Rudraprayag, and My India) and supported by
rare photographs and evocative line drawings, this
volume reflects the evolution of his writing as well as
his long relationship with the Press. |
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