The Tiger’s Wife

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What to expect

As Natalia and a friend travel across the former Yugoslavia, immunising villagers, the body of her grandfather turns up in a hospital in the middle of nowhere. She and her family have no idea why.

Recalling stories he told her as a child, she becomes convinced that he went in search of the Deathless Man, a mythical figure, that her grandfather claimed to have met a number of times in his life.

In her quest to find out how her grandfather, a man of hard fact and science, could turn to this fantasy, she discovers something particular about his childhood: a tiger escaped from a zoo during World War II bombings and wandered deep into the woods, settling just outside his peasant village. It terrorised the town, the devil incarnate to everyone, except for her grandfather and 'the tiger's wife'...

Read by Robin Sachs and Susan Duerden

(p) 2011 Penguin Random House LLC

Critics Review

  • Obreht’s novel is that rarity: a debut that arrives fully formed, super smart but wearing its learning lightly. Above all The Tiger’s Wife bristles with confidence

    Financial Times
  • The brilliant black comedy and matryoshka-style narrative are among the novel’s great joys…Obreht has prodigious talent for storytelling and imagery

    Guardian
  • Beautifully executed, haunting and lyrical, The Tiger’s Wife is an ambitious novel that succeeds on all counts. It’s a book you will want to read again and again

    Indpendent
  • Obreht’s landscape hovers half in and half out of fable – where villagers who daily risk being hoisted by landmines also fear malign spirits, tigers’ brides and men who transform into bears… It’s a part of the world that Obreht has made her imagination’s own: raucous and strange and gorgeous and rather haunting. This is a pretty formidable first novel. Here be tigers

    Financial Times
  • She is a natural born storyteller and this is a startlingly suggestive novel about the dying out of myths and superstitions and rituals that bind people to place: the retreat of the spirits

    Daily Telegraph
  • This is a distinguished work by almost any standard, and a genuinely exciting debut… Obreht has a vibrant, rangy, full-bodied prose style, which moves expertly between realistic and mythic modes of storytelling, conjuring brilliant images on every page… a delightful work, as enchanting as it is surprising, and Obreht is a compelling new voice

    Sunday Times

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