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Jungle Lore

Jungle Lore

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Author: Jim Corbett
Creator: Martin Booth
Publisher: Oxford University Press, USA
Category: Book

List Price: $24.95
Buy New: $13.53
You Save: $11.42 (46%)



New (15) Used (7) Collectible (1) from $13.53

Avg. Customer Rating: 4.0 out of 5 stars 6 reviews
Sales Rank: 86559

Media: Paperback
Edition: 2
Number Of Items: 1
Pages: 184
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.4
Dimensions (in): 8.4 x 5.4 x 0.5

ISBN: 0195651855
Dewey Decimal Number: 796
EAN: 9788172242688
ASIN: 0195651855

Publication Date: May 11, 2000
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
Shipping: International shipping available
Condition: Brand New, Perfect Condition, Please allow 4-14 business days for delivery. 100% Money Back Guarantee, Over 1,000,000 customers served.

Editorial Reviews:

Product Description
Jim Corbett, naturalist, shikari, and conservationist is famous for his tales of hunting in the Indian Jungle. Many years before the issues of conservation became understood, Corbett was obsessed with the jungle and animals of the Kumaon hills. This new edition of Jungle Lore offers
Corbett's own story of his life and career. At the heart of the narrative is a cry for sensitivity to the fragility of nature, and despair over mankind's divorce from his environment--a message as vibrant today as it ever was.



Customer Reviews:   Read 1 more reviews...

5 out of 5 stars My all-time favorite author   February 27, 2006
 2 out of 2 found this review helpful

Jim Corbett is one of my all-time-favorite authors. I have read all his books, but the one I love the most is `Jungle Lore'. I have the first Indian edition of the book. It belonged to my dad who bought it in 1971 for 2.50 Rupees (which is roughly 5 cents)!

Corbett loved the jungle. He is considered the greatest tiger hunter India ever knew, and the reason he was so successful was not only because he knew the Kumaon jungle like the back of his hand, but also because he understood the jungle. He could understand the sounds of animals and birds. He could even make those sounds with great accuracy. He could look at the pug marks of animals on a mud path and tell a whole story of what happened there that morning. He had a sixth sense of jungle which he called his "jungle sensitiveness".

This book is not about hunting. This is a book about nature. Corbett writes with lot of humbleness and humor. One cannot stop admiring his courage and his vast knowledge of the jungle after reading this book.



4 out of 5 stars The book of nature has no beginning, as it has no end   October 10, 2005
 1 out of 1 found this review helpful

Jim Corbett - who is more famous for his books on hair raising encounters with man eating tigers and leopards - had also written two slightly different books: Jungle Lore and My India. Jungle Lore has fascinating accounts of Corbett's experiences in the Jungles on the foothills of Himalayas in India.

From his early childhood when he used to venture into the jungles armed with a catapult (from which he graduated to pellet-bow followed by a muzzle-loader and finally rifles), Corbett absorbed as much as he could about the way of the jungle. He says that jungle lore is not a science that can be learnt in textbooks; it can only be absorbed, little at a time, for "the book of nature has no beginning, as it has no end." Based only on his observations, Corbett describes a wide variety of birds, animals, and reptiles living in the jungles, and classifies them into different categories based on their behavior, eating habits, role in maintaining the balance of nature, etc.

Though there are certain sections of the book that describe Corbett organizing "beats" for the aristocracy (British and Indian) to hunt down tigers for sport which appear a little out of character with Corbett's avowed respect for animals (there is even a section where Corbett decides to kill a big male leopard just because he was "worth shooting"), there is no doubt that Corbett, through his books, had done more towards raising awareness on the conservation of the wild life in the jungles of India than anyone else. It's a shame that most of the jungles described in Corbett's books are slowly becoming a thing of the past, and unless desperate measures are taken, rapid population growth and indiscriminate poaching will forever deprive India of the finest of her flora and fauna.



2 out of 5 stars Too much wanton killing for sport   August 29, 2004
 10 out of 24 found this review helpful

This is a wonderfully written book on how to kill a whole bunch of animals now on the endangered species list. Jim Corbett needs no introduction of course, and 'Jungle Lore' is as beautifully written as any of Corbett's books. But there are some contradictions in Corbett's books that I find hard to understand, and Jungle Lore is no exception. In fact, whole chapters of the book are devoted to pure sport hunting in the style of his bloodthirsty contemporaries.

In Jungle Lore, we are told how Corbett killed "the biggest leopard in India" - because it was "worth shooting". No justification is given or deemed necessary!

We are also given a detailed description of a "beat" carried out to please the Viceroy of India. We learn that the hunt went so beautifully that each member of the Viceroy's party "bagged" a tiger.

Among other stories, there is one of a tiger - not a man-eater or even a cattle killer - which had been outwitting its would-be killers (a local maharajah and his minions) for years, and which was finally hunted down owing to Corbett's tracking skills.

The last couple of stories are particularly distasteful as they show, in microcosm, the demise of Indian wildlife at the hands of the British and Indian aristocracy. Though Corbett calls the tiger a 'gentleman', he does serious damage to his credibility by not recording his opposition to wanton sport-killing. Indeed, he organizes beats for the aristocracy, and frequently shoots tigers and leopards either for sport or for trivial reasons. The common assertion that Corbett ever gave up sport hunting for the camera is surprising, since Jungle Lore clearly states that he shot his last tiger after the Second World War (when he was past 70).

As a conservationist, it thus seems that Corbett is not in the same league as his great contemporary, F.W. Champion, whose books 'With a Camera in Tiger-Land' and 'The Jungle in Sunlight and Shadow' inspired a generation of people to give up the gun for the camera. Champion recorded his objection to the hunting of wildlife for sport unequivocally in his books. Moreover, he actually practiced what he preached by completely ceasing to shoot after the mid 1920s, an age when tigers - and huge trophy tigers at that! - were still abundant. Contrast this with Corbett, who shot the magnificent Bachelor of Powalgarh for sport (as described in gory detail in 'The Man-Eaters of Kumaon') in 1930. It is tragic that Fred Champion - whose pioneering efforts produced the first ever photographs of wild tigers, leopards and a host of other wildlife - is hardly known.

In the midst of the descriptions of the thrills of hunting, Jungle Lore does contain material, written in Corbett's inimitable style, that describes the rich wildlife of India in a forgotten era. Classic descriptions of the battle between a pair of mating tigers and a big tusker elephant, of the method employed by otters to kill pythons, and of a battle between a crested eagle and a fishing cat are highlights of the book. So also are the descriptions of the methods of tracking wild animals, though it is frequently to put a bullet through them. Given the historical importance of the book, and also its price, it is certainly worth buying if you are interested in Indian wildlife.



4 out of 5 stars Entertaining narrative with genuine depth   December 11, 2003
 11 out of 12 found this review helpful

James E. Corbett grew up in an India that was still a colony of Great Britain. This is an autobiographical account of episodes in his life -- by no means complete, but a taste of what it was like to grow up, not in the culture of British India, but in the jungles that surrounded it. He was a self-taught naturalist and tracker, learning to hunt, track, find direction, and survive in the jungles. The stories are mostly entertaining -- except toward the end, where I found myself flipping forward in some distaste because of his description of hunting tigers for sport. But Corbett himself demonstrates a healthy reverence for life, and moreover, a strong appetite for learning about the natural world, and for developing his sensitivity to it.

The book is largely narrative, but mixed in with it is a little bit of his philosophy of jungle law, and some material about what he has learned through his experiences, supplemented, of course, with more stories. This, like other anecdotal evidence, should be taken with a grain of salt and tested against one's own experience. For instance, he writes that venomous snakes, with one exception, are slower and so have to wriggle more in order to move around, and so their tracks will reflect this, while non-venomous snakes are speedy and agile and will have straight rather than wave-form tracks. A friend of mine who's very familiar with snakes disputes this.

But, as Corbett himself says, "Having stated that the book of Nature has no beginning, and no end, I would be the last to claim that I have learned all that is to be learned of any of the subjects dealt with here, or that this book contains any expert knowledge." Undoubtedly, though, through his extensive experience alone, he has learned enough to be a master, in harmony with his jungle.


5 out of 5 stars THE TRUE NATURALISTS BOOK.   December 13, 1998
 20 out of 23 found this review helpful

It will take you far, far into past, into the very heart of India, the land of jungles, of love, of true simplicity,

Jim Corbett will accompany you into the past with you and lead you into the future, this is a book that reiterates, that nature has no beginning as it has no end..., a revealing insight into one remarkable man, a britisher who was in India to live with its wonderful people and animals and who richly deserves the honour of being remembered even today, in the land he loved, and the place he tread, bears the call, CORBETT NATIONAL PARK.

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