AN OFFICER AND A TIGER: TRAILS OF JIM CORBETT AND OTHER TALES

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Non-Fiction

AN OFFICER AND A TIGER: TRAILS OF JIM CORBETT AND OTHER TALES

By: Yogesh Chandra

495.00

  • ISBN: 978-93-5352-562-0
  • Pages: 176 pages
  • Published: 05 January, 2026
  • Format: Hardback
  • Imprint: Rupa
  • Language: English

‘Suddenly, with a huge roar, the tiger attacked the front wheel of the tractor and literally tore it to shreds. The vehicle tilted dangerously to one side and we clung on for dear life.’ 

In the late 1960s, young IAS officer Yogesh Chandra was posted to Pilibhit, a breathtaking Terai district on the Nepal border. It was a different India then, when days were spent solving people’s problems and nights echoed with the pukh, pukh of chital, the khor, khor of langurs, the meowr, meowr of peafowls and the deep, resonant roar of tigers in the dark. 

From the sugarcane fields of Bahraich to the ravines of Chambal and the misty slopes of Kumaon, Chandra recounts his wild escapades on the trail of man-eating tigers and fearsome dacoits, while tracing the footsteps of the legendary Jim Corbett. Yet, beneath the thrill lies a wistful note for the forests that once teemed with life. 


Yogesh Chandra is a distinguished alumnus of St. Stephen’s College, University of Delhi, and an Edward S. Mason Fellow at Harvard University. 

A 1962-batch officer of the Indian Administrative Service, he served across Uttar Pradesh and was among the first chairmen and chief executive officers of Noida, as well as Economic Adviser to the King of Bhutan. Over the course of a distinguished career, he held several senior positions in the Government of India, retiring with the rank of Cabinet Secretary to the Government of India. 

His later work in corporate social responsibility culminated in his leadership of the Coca-Cola India Foundation. A keen observer of people and places, he brings warmth and wit to his recollections of an India that once lived close to the wild. He is the father of senior journalist Vikram Chandra, who anchored the Save Our Tigers campaign in the late 2000s. 


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