The Bengal Tiger By Jeannie Ebner, Translation and Afterword by Lowell A. Bangerter
The Bengal Tiger By Jeannie Ebner, Translation and Afterword by Lowell A. Bangerter
An impetuous street urchin with the slanted, yellowish eyes of a predator, a hardened peasant grandmother whose spirit remains unbroken by urban misery, a beautiful, insane Amazon with a horribly fascinating serpentine scar, an unemployed father turned sex-murderer, an animal trainer who loses control of his beasts at a critical moment, a doctor in charge of a ward in a mental institution, and the tiger — these are central figures in a story that explores a variety of problems characteristic of modern existence: alienation, moral degeneration, mental and spiritual decay, the collapse of the family, the timeless conflicts between male and female, parent and child, nature and civilization. The Bengal Tiger describes a small boy's search for love, acceptance, and security in a hostile environment.