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The Tiger

ebook / ISBN-13: 9781848946897

Price: £10.99

ON SALE: 24th August 2010

Genre: Biography & True Stories / Biography: General

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**From the author of the 2023 Baillie Gifford Prize for Non-Fiction winning Fire Weather**

‘An unbelievable tale, expertly told’ Patrick Radden Keefe, author of Empire of Pain

‘A superb book ‘ Daily Mail · ‘Masterful . . . mesmerising, rangy and relentless’ Sunday Telegraph

A man-eating tiger is hunting villagers in the snowy forests of Far Eastern Russia.

A small team of men and their dogs must hunt the tiger in turn. As evidence mounts, it becomes clear that the tiger’s attacks aren’t random: it is seeking revenge. Injured, starving and extremely dangerous, the tiger must be found before it strikes again.

As he tracks the tiger’s deadly progress, John Vaillant draws an unforgettable portrait of a distant and brutal region, over 5,000 miles from Moscow. In the harsh depths of winter in Primorye, a gripping tale of man and nature unfolds.

‘Exciting, memorable – and perfectly, impeccably right . . . a tale of astonishing power and vigour’ Simon Winchester, author of The Surgeon of Crowthorne

‘Extraordinary . . . a brilliantly told tale of man and nature’ New York Review of Books

What's Inside

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Reviews

The structure of Vaillant's nonfiction hunting tale echoes that of Moby Dick, alternating a gripping chase narrative -- the search, in the late 1990s, for a man-eating Amur tiger in the Primorye region, on Russia's far eastern border -- with dense explanations of the culture and ecology surrounding the chase.
New York Times
Like its majestic and terrifying subject, John Vaillant's book moves with subtlety and grace, commands a vast terrain - and has the power to shake the observer's soul . . . What unfolds, in a richly layered story that partners cunning with sublimity, is a tragedy in several acts and with multiple dimensions . . . The Tiger also counts as a supreme example of true-crime writing driven by wide-angle empathy and compassion. Some readers may choose to shelve it, not among cosy wildlife yarns, but with Truman Capote's In Cold Blood.
Boyd Tonkin, Independent
This is an altogether different kind of manhunt story . . . . The pursuit culminates in a breathtaking stand-off of man versus cat in a forest clearing - a denouement every bit as explosive and surprising as the raid in Abbottabad earlier this week.
Hampton Sides, Wall Street Journal
Extraordinary . . . a brilliantly told tale of man and nature
Tim Flannery, New York Review of Books
Few writers have taken such pains to understand their monsters, and few depict them in such arresting prose.
New York Times Book Review
An adventure so heart-thumping, it can feel like a spy thriller.
<i>GQ</i>, The 50 Best Books of Literary Journalism of the 21st Century
Compelling . . . a superb book - hyper-intelligent, wonderfully well-written, with a great cast, both human and animal, and at its heart, the amazing and truly chilling story of one tiger's winter campaign of murderous revenge
Harry Ritchie, Daily Mail
Riveting
Washington Post
By all means read Vaillant's magnificent book about the animal: The Tiger offers readers a shiver-inducing portrait of a predator that has been revered - and feared - like no other animal.
San Francisco Chronicle
Brad Pitt has bought the movie rights to The Tiger, but with all due respect to Mr. Pitt, there's no way the movie will match Mr. Vaillant's book.
Washington Times
This masterful account of the terror, death and grief caused by a man-eating Amur tiger in Russia in 1997 is as mesmerising, rangy and relentless as the creature in question.
Sunday Telegraph
An affectionate account
TLS
An unbelievable tale, expertly told, with a few paragraphs that I would give my eye teeth to have written.
Patrick Radden Keefe, author of EMPIRE OF PAIN
The Tiger takes us on a journey to the raw edge of civilization, to a world of vengeful cats and venal men, a world that, in Vaillant's brilliant telling, is simultaneously haunting and enchanting.
Hampton Sides, author of GHOST SOLDIERS
This book must be read by everybody who is interested in the conservation of wildlife. It takes you to the Russian wilderness to meet face-to-face with the Siberian tiger.
Temple Grandin, author of ANIMALS IN TRANSLATION
The Tiger is the sort of book I very much like and rarely find. Humans are hard-wired to fear tigers, so this book will attract intense interest.
Annie Proulx, Puliter Prize-winning author of THE SHIPPING NEWS
An absolutely superb book.
George Schaller, Wildlife Conservation Society & Panthera
A masterpiece
Outside
Brilliant
US Library Journal
An instant classic
Calgary Herald
Astoundingly gripping
Toronto Star
Read this fine, true book in the warmth, beside the flicker of firelight. Read it and be afraid. Be very afraid.
Simon Winchester, Globe and Mail
Breathtakingly exciting
Vancouver Sun
A hair-raising tale in which conservation, madness and even murder collide.
Montreal Gazette
Fascinating and compelling plot
Ottawa Citizen
Not so incidentally, if ever a nonfiction author has used the techniques of fiction any better to recount a real-life narrative, it is difficult to imagine who that author would be.
Seattle Times
Part natural history, part Russian history and part thriller; it tells a gripping and gory story of what it's like to stalk - and be stalked by - the largest species of cat still walking the Earth.
National Public Radio (USA)
John Vaillant is a literary shaman.
Quill & Quire
Enthralling
Christian Science Monitor
An extraordinary account of a tracker on the trail of a Siberian man-eating tiger in 1997. Along the way we get a load of tiger facts and a beautiful portrait of a forbidding region. It is a stunning, lovely, lovely book.
Bookseller
Writing in a vigorous, evocative style . . . Vaillant paints a haunting portrait of man's vexed relationship with nature.
Publishers Weekly
A tale with memorable characters, a beautifully described setting and moments of startling drama . . . Vaillant's research is matched by the elegance of his writing . . . Vaillant is able to empathise so fully with both human and animal protagonists that it is hard to believe he wasn't there . . . This is a remarkable story, exceptionally well told
Tim Souster, Financial Times