<p><strong>The dramatic true account of the two legendary lions that terrorized railway workers during the construction of the Uganda Railway in East Africa at the end of the nineteenth century.</strong></p><p>In 1898 Lieutenant Colonel John Henry Patterson was sent to British East Africa to oversee the building of a railway bridge over the Tsavo River. What should have been a routine engineering assignment soon turned into one of the most famous man-eating lion incidents in history. Two enormous male lions began attacking the railway workers' camps at night dragging men from their tents and spreading fear across the entire construction project.</p><p>In this gripping firsthand narrative Patterson recounts the months of terror that followed as the lions repeatedly outwitted traps guards and hunters. Workers fled the site construction halted and rumors spread throughout East Africa of supernatural beasts haunting the railway line. Determined to end the attacks Patterson undertook a relentless campaign to track and destroy the predators.</p><p>Part adventure narrative part historical document <em>The Man-Eaters of Tsavo</em> remains one of the great classics of big-game literature. Patterson's account captures both the dangers of colonial frontier life and the extraordinary confrontation between human determination and the raw power of the African wilderness.</p>
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