Jim Corbett Omnibus V-2 Edited by Mahasweta Devi ebook PDF

Jim Corbett Omnibus Vol. 2 Edited by Mahasweta Devi ebook PDF

Book – Jim Corbett Omnibus Volume-2,
Language – (Bengali/English),
Edited by Mahasweta Debi,
Author – Jim Corbet,
Book Format- PDF/Epub,
Book pages – 501,
PDF Size – 18 MB,
Epub Size – 2 MB,

Jim Corbett Omnibus Volume 2 Edited by Mahasweta Devi PDF.

The book Jim Corbett Omnibus has been translated into two Volumes by the author Mahasweta Devi. James Omnibus is written entirely about James Corbett. These two volumes were originally edited from the English version of James Omnibus.
The author has presented one of these books as an incomparable book to the readers through her beautiful writing. The English version of Jim Corbett Omnibus is provided on this web page. Readers can easily collect the English text.
In this book, the author has described the events in different parts of the Himalayas. The stories contained in this book cannot be called mere stories, because all the events that have been narrated are based on true events and not only true events but also the eyewitness’s own account.

Most of the world knows about the Himalayas. It is not easy to give a brief description of the vast range between the Himalayas and the Indus Brahmaputra, as it is about one and a half thousand miles long in the east-west and rises from 500 feet to five miles in height. If the climate of one region is vegetation and even the scenery is different from other regions, the sky starts from 13 to 17 thousand feet, such as the eternal snow region. It is covered with snow all the year round so no plant can grow there. In the eastern Himalayas, which means longitude to the south (Assam, Bengal, East Nepal, Sikkim, Bhutan, etc.) there will be ice lines around 17,000 feet which can be seen near Kullu or Badrinath about 13,000. If you go to Amarnath Road in Kashmir, you will see the ice line further down as this region is located in the longitude north of the Himalayas. Below the ice line, an area can be seen across a wide range, which is the nice garden of the goddess of nature. With the advent of spring, a colorful flower fair is held here (12 to 16 thousand feet). That is why the famous English mountaineer Smith called this region Valley of Flowers. Which someone else has called “Valley of the Gods”. Wild goats, wild sheep, bears, snow leopards, deer, hawks, etc. are the animals that can be seen in this high mountain forest. It is full of sal and teak trees, and lots of water and teak trees. Tigers will be seen more there. In two volumes of his book, the author beautifully describes how Jim Corbett lived and hunted in this vast, remote area.
Let’s get to the heart of the matter, this book is about Jim Corbett.

An analysis of who Jim Corbett was will be provided at the bottom of this web page. For the time being, various stories of his victim have been narrated. Of particular note in Jim Corbett’s hunting story is how skilled he was as a hunter, and how much he endured hardships and patience, without which he certainly would not have been a high-quality hunter. He acknowledged that in order to maintain normal human life, he would chase away those animals in order to endanger them or fight them and defeat them.


The content of Main book Jim Corbett Omnibus (English) by Jim Corbett.

  • Man-Eaters of Kumaon — Page 3 – 227
  • The Temple Tiger and More Man-Eaters of Kumaon — Page 228 – 392
  • The Man-Eating Leopard of Rudraprayag — Page 393 – 551
  • My India — Page 552 – 710
  • Jungle Lore — Page 711 – 855
  • Tree Tops — Page 856 – 877

Readers can collect the Jim Corbett Omnibus (English) and read here.


Jim Corbett was an ordinary man in a low-income house. He spent his childhood in the forests of the Terai region of Nainital, India. He always had a cordial relationship with the common poor and he risked his life to protect the common people and sometimes he helped those who did not have food as much as possible.

He knew this country and the people of this country as his own. It is unknown at this time what he will do after leaving the post. He was ungrateful to his sister, he was also ungrateful.

According to some, he could not accept any of the social changes in independent India in 1947 for whatever reason and for which they both had to leave the country. Some speculate that he had amassed a large number of Kumaoni and Garowali soldiers for the war, many of whom never returned, reverently and lovingly, to show his face to the hundreds of householders who would be overwhelmed with anguish and grief. Unable to bear it, he finally left the country.

He eventually left India, but his memory remains “Corbett Park”. Corbett was a naturalist. And in this area where he has spent his life, the name of the sanctuary is meaningful. The unforgettable story of the man-eating cheetah of Rudraprayag as a hunter and observer can still be remembered today.
Tigers kill people in one place and kill them 10 miles away. Today on the other side of Alaknanda, tomorrow on the other side of Alaknanda. Thus he carried out his difficult rule over a mountainous area of ​​about 500 square miles. Throughout this vast mountainous area he has fought fiercely with tigers and cheetahs. Writer Mahasweta Devi has narrated her life story with her perfect writing which will be deeply appreciated by the readers and will become attractive.

Let’s come to who was Jim Corbett?

Edward James Corbett is known to us as Jim Corbett. He was born in 1875 in Agrasen Nainital. Jim Corbett’s father was an Irishman. Jim was their eighth child. Father Christopher Garni did general government work. Corbett was born in Nainital, the house he built, called the Garni House. At that time it was very cold in Nainital. Like all the householders in the hill town, white Indians, the Corbett family had another winter quarters. It is a small village called Kaladhungi in the state of Tehri, 15 miles from Nainital. Jim Corbett had some land there and farmed. Nainital used to live in summer. At the death of Corbett’s mother in 1924, the Garni House bequeathed Jim Corbett’s sister, Maggie. 3
Kaladungi’s house has now been converted into a Corbett Museum by the Uttar Pradesh government. Nainital’s ‘Garni House’ is currently owned by Kalavati Burma.

Jim Corbett attended school in Nainital and in 1895 took a part-time job on the Bengal and North Western Railway. At that time wood was used instead of coal in railway locomotives. Jim Corbett went to the forest to cut and supply that wood. When the conditional work is completed, Jim Corbett works as a fuel inspector, wagon guard, assistant warehouse keeper, assistant station master, etc. He then got the job of a contractor for lifting goods from broad gauge to meter gauge at Mokama wharf at the boat wharf and he did this job for twenty one years with admirable qualifications. He retired from 1915-16. He then joined World War I. He recruited 5,000 troops from the Kumaon region, went to France and Waziristan, and was promoted to the rank of Major in the Indian Army. In World War II, he trained the Indian Army in guerrilla warfare and was promoted to the rank of Lieutenant Colonel.

In his career, he killed his first man-eater, Champabati’s tigress, in 1907. The tiger of his last man-eating prey Thak was in 1938. His role in the forest and wildlife conservation movement has been at the forefront of the world for decades. He had unrestricted access to all the protected forests of India.

In 1947, Jim Corbett and his sister Maggie visited the Garney House in November, sold their Garney House to Mr P.K. Burma and moved to Nieri, Kenya in Africa. While there, Corbett started a wildlife conservation movement and edited magazines. Jim Corbett died on April 19, 1955, 13 days after finishing his last book, Tree Tops. He was buried in St. Peter’s Aurelian Charge Cemetery. Corbett never had a desire to be a writer. He wrote Man-Eaters of Kumaon to his friends and fans. The book was published in 1946. The book became world famous immediately. My India was published in 1952. Jungle Lore was published in 1953, The Temple Tiger and More Man-Eaters of Kumaon was published in 1954 and The ‘Man-Eating Leopard of Rudraprayag’.

The copyright of his first book was donated to the Indian Army for the medical treatment of those who lost their sight in the Second World War. Other books are copyrighted by staff at Oxford University Press. The author’s memoir Omnibus was published with the full support of the Oxford University’s Calcutta, Delhi and Mumbai offices.
So there is no doubt that the book James Omnibus volume 2 will be appreciated by the readers. This page is provided as a PDF file for readers to collect and read.

James Omnibus volume 2 PDF and epub file.

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