Rating: Not rated
Tags: Lang:en
Publisher: Knopf
Added: March 28, 2020
Modified: March 29, 2020
Summary
August 2010 The grisly rampage of a man-eating Amur, or Siberian, tiger
and the effort to trap it frame this suspenseful and
majestically narrated introduction to a world that few people,
even Russians, are familiar with. Northeast of China lies
RussiaÖs Primorye province, "the meeting place of four
distinct bioregions"–taiga, Mongolian steppes, boreal
forests, and Korean tropics--and where the last Amur tigers
live in an uneasy truce with an equally diminished human
population scarred by decades of brutal Soviet politics and
postperestroika poverty. Over millennia of shared history, the
indigenous inhabitants had worked out a tenuous peace with the
Amur, a formidable hunter that can grow to over 500 pounds and
up to nine feet long, but the arrival of European settlers,
followed by decades of Soviet disregard for the wilds,
disrupted that balance and led to the overhunting of tigers for
trophies and for their alleged medicinal qualities. Vaillant
(The Golden Spruce) has written a mighty elegy that leads
readers into the lair of the tiger and into the heart of the
Kremlin to explain how the Amur went from being worshipped to
being poached.