Categories

The Legend of the Man-Eater

AuthorArjan Singh
PublisherNatraj Publishers
Publisher2025
Publisherreprint
Publisherxix
Publisher164 p,
ISBN9788181583635

Contents:  Introduction. 1. Early days. 2. Interlude. 3. From killer to conservation. 4. Hunting. 5. The legend of the man-eater. 6. Quo Vadis: The Makanpur man-eater. 7. The man-eaters of Tirkolia and Visenpuri. 8. Long Toes, or the Man-eater of the Nagrol-Neora River Basin. 9. The Median tigress. 10. The man-eater of Barauchha Nala. 11. The Ghola Man-eater. 12. Suheli, the man-eating tigress. 13. The man-eater of Salukapur. 14. Splay toes: Almost a man-eater. 15. The man-eater of Banga Jhala. 16. Sheroo. 17. The twilight years. Acknowledgements. 

Arjan Singh remains one of India’s most celebrated conservationists and authorities on wildlife. Based since 1959 in Tiger Haven, his farm in Uttar Pradesh five miles away from the Nepal border, he helped establish and gain official recognition for the Dudhwa National Park. From here, Arjan Singh studied the varied wildlife of the area, reared and successfully returned to the wild a tigress and two leopards and, generally, waged a crusade against environmental destruction. Above all, he studied and was a spokesman for the tiger. 

The Legend of the Maneater is a book with a definite purpose. It aims to spread the message that wildlife, particularly the tiger and other large predators, must be protected far more effectively than at present: ‘This is essential not only because animals are wonderful in themselves, but because their presence in the wild is the surest way of stemming environmental degradation and the best indicator of the environmental health of our planet.’

The first four chapters of this book deftly and wittily evoke the author’s childhood and youth and show his evolution to becoming a conservationist. He emphasizes that the desire to kill compulsively is not an atavistic inheritance in human beings, ‘but a deep complex of redirected aggression triggered by an insufficiency in the so-called sport hunter.’

In the thirteen chapters that follow, the author eloquently refutes an entire gamut of misconceptions concerning the great predators which have accumulated over the ages, and which have been used to justify the wanton destruction of the tiger in particular. He illustrates his argument with case histories of some man eaters he was associated with: tigers take to man-eating only under extreme pressure and entirely because of human interference in tiger habitats.

Loading...