THE WILD LIFE OF INDIA E. P. GEE LONDON: COLLINS 1964 1st edition. 22 x 15 cm. 192 pp + colour & b/w photo plates. HB/DJ SOME of the noblest and most beautiful animals in the world are to be found in India. But they are unlikely to survive outside the pages of Kipling and the memoirs of big-game hunters unless something is done quickly to save them. Mr. E. P. Gee has spent half a life-time studying and photographing animals and birds in India ; recently a newly discovered species of golden langur was named after him by an Officer of the Zoological Survey of India. He has sat in the open within ten feet of a lion in the Gir Forest, has fallen in front of a charging rhinoceros and he has a strange tale to tell of a bird mystery in Assam ; but although it is full of good stories this is not a book of daring deeds. It is a unique panorama of the wild life resources of India— her sanctuaries, the animals which inhabit them and the men who have done most to preserve them. Still surviving are the Indian elephant and, more precariously the lion ; leopards and tigers, including the white tigers of Rewa with their icy-blue eyes; dancing deer on their floating sanctuary in Manipur and the pelicans of Andhra feeding their young. On the other hand it comes as a shock to find how many species—including the Kashmir stag and the great Indian bustard —are close to extinction, and how others— such as the cheetah and the pinkheaded duck —have been wiped out in recent years. For anyone interested in wild life or the natural resources of India this is an enthralling and informative book; for the animals themselves it may make all the difference between extermination and survival.

THE WILD LIFE OF INDIA

E. P. GEE

LONDON: COLLINS
1964

First edition.
SOME of the noblest and most beautiful animals in the world are to be found in India. But they are unlikely to survive outside the pages of Kipling and the memoirs of big-game hunters unless something is done quickly to save them.

Mr. E. P. Gee has spent half a life-time studying and photographing animals and birds in India ; recently a newly discovered species of golden langur was named after him by an Officer of the Zoological Survey of India. He has sat in the open within ten feet of a lion in the Gir Forest, has fallen in front of a charging rhinoceros and he has a strange tale to tell of a bird mystery in Assam ; but although it is full of good stories this is not a book of daring deeds. It is a unique panorama of the wild life resources of India— her sanctuaries, the animals which inhabit them and the men who have done most to preserve them. Still surviving are the Indian elephant and, more precariously the lion ; leopards and tigers, including the white tigers of Rewa with their icy-blue eyes; dancing deer on their floating sanctuary in Manipur and the pelicans of Andhra feeding their young. On the other hand it comes as a shock to find how many species—including the Kashmir stag and the great Indian bustard —are close to extinction, and how others— such as the cheetah and the pinkheaded duck —have been wiped out in recent years.

For anyone interested in wild life or the natural resources of India this is an enthralling and informative book; for the animals themselves it may make all the difference between extermination and survival.

22 x 15 cm. 192 pp + colour & b/w photo plates.

Very good - condition. Dust jacket torn, with some loss (now in protective cover). Bumped at the base of the spine. Previous owner's name on the front free endpaper, otherwise clean and tidy.






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