Reading the entirety of Felix Salten’s 1923 original, “Bambi: A Life in the Woods”, one would notice a variety of emphasis on the ongoing concept of Man Vs Nature. A direct yet ironic contradiction between Salten’s personal life as a hunter, who had killed thousands of wild animals, and the contents of the story as the aspires of true Human disregard for the natural world comes to light. One look at the book’s initial chapters, and the horrors of what is set out to portray in the rest of the story are made hauntingly clear. Falling upon the very well known writing of a coming of age story following a young male protagonist going against the well established boundaries of a world new to them, in an attempt to assimilate or fulfill a destined role. Mr. Salten has done a rather phenomenal job in capturing the realities that are hidden to the average consumer, as he dictates within the facets of his work, the underlying facts that create the circle of life that inevitably feeds us as people. The context of the novel instigates a deep connection to the Jewish experience during Nazi Germany when people of that decent had gone through a series of dehumanizing presumptions leading to an era of true massacre; a connection any reader could unite within the events that dictated the animals of the story to the occurrences of real history. These subtle yet obvious relations led to the book being banned in Germany 1936, as it became a hidden subdomain for the records of cruelty displayed by German soldiers which are in notion the “He/Him” throughout the text. Further recollections of this literature could only be found in secret archives as most of the copies were burned during its time of expulsion. Considering the date of the Disney Movie “Bambi” on August 21st, 1942, the real message is yet to really be fathomed until a reiteration of the original book had recently made its way upstream. As the recent novel missioned to reveal the not so distant relations that most people who have fallen in love with the Disney adaptation had yet to foretell. The unlikely origins of this text by its unfavorable author, Felix Salten, had proved to be the complete opposite terms for its making. Salten had a contradicting link to the novel as he took part in the murdering of wild animals which most would consider to be against the agenda of his work alongside his links to the porn industry which in face value would be inappropriate for a piece that seeks to enlighten children.