Declare Books In Pursuance Of The Long Walk: The True Story of a Trek to Freedom
Original Title: | The Long Walk: The True Story of a Trek to Freedom |
ISBN: | 1592289444 (ISBN13: 9781592289448) |
Edition Language: | English |
Characters: | Slavomir Rawicz |
Setting: | Poland Siberia,1941(Russian Federation) Moscow(Russian Federation) …more (Pakistan) …less |
SÅ‚awomir Rawicz
Paperback | Pages: 256 pages Rating: 4.21 | 15540 Users | 2082 Reviews
Mention About Books The Long Walk: The True Story of a Trek to Freedom
Title | : | The Long Walk: The True Story of a Trek to Freedom |
Author | : | SÅ‚awomir Rawicz |
Book Format | : | Paperback |
Book Edition | : | First Edition |
Pages | : | Pages: 256 pages |
Published | : | April 1st 2006 by Lyons Press (first published 1956) |
Categories | : | Nonfiction. History. Adventure. Biography. Autobiography. Memoir. Travel |
Narration Concering Books The Long Walk: The True Story of a Trek to Freedom
There is much controversy as to whether this account is fact or fiction. I googled the author's name and the book title and after reading dozens of articles and opinions, I'm still not sure, though I lean towards thinking that the narrative is actually a composite of a number of experiences including Rawicz's. As was said in an account on the web entitled "#18 Anderson's Long Walk Expedition", in which a group of people retraced Rawicz's journey, although on camels not on foot: Attempting to find truth in every written word of the Long Walk dooms the book to skepticism. The two most poignant examples of this are Rawicz and his companions crossing the Gobi desert without water for 13 days and sighting the yeti in the Himalayas. However, both of these events occurred when Rawicz was close to death due to extreme environmental conditions. Other sections of the book, such as the descriptions of the local people and their customs are so accurate it seems impossible a Polish immigrant living in England could have made up such details without experiencing them first hand. Giving Rawicz some creative leeway, considering English was his third or fourth language and he wrote the book more than 15 years after the walk occurred, the events in the book take on a more believable tone. You can find the complete article on the Polartech web site. I certainly enjoyed reading the book whether or not it was a completely true re-telling of Rawicz's experiences or not. The story was actually transcribed by Ronald Downing, a British reporter. I'm sure he took some creative liberties, especially in describing the Yeti encounter, due to his desire to find eye-witness accounts of just such meetings. The story is exciting and moves along briskly. The prose is sparse but captures the emotion of these survivors very well. I recommend reading the book, if for no other reason, than to make up your own mind about the controversy surrounding its veracity.Rating About Books The Long Walk: The True Story of a Trek to Freedom
Ratings: 4.21 From 15540 Users | 2082 ReviewsJudge About Books The Long Walk: The True Story of a Trek to Freedom
A story about a Polish cavalry officer captured by the Russians in 1939 and sentenced to 25 years in a Siberian prison. Escaping in late winter with six companions of varied nationalities, they deal with cold and hunger (they took food but had a meager diet before leaving and had little to hunt with). Along the way, they find a girl (as he calls her, but it seems she is more likely a young woman) who is also a fugitive, and they encounter individuals and civilizations that help them with foodThis is an autobiography/biography of a Polish man who was arrested in Russia during WWII. He was accused of being a spy and given 25 years to be served in a prison in northern Russia. There is a cloud of controversy swirling around this book about whether this actually happened or not of if it is the true story of someone else who wasn't the author. Knowing this didn't really change my enjoyment of this book. It was really quite the story and would make a great movie. So 4 stars.
The Long Walk, by Slavomir Rawicz, purports to be the true story of an heroic flight to freedom. He claims to have been a Polish officer grabbed by the Russians in 1939, imprisoned and marched to "camp 303" in Siberia. From there he and six companions escape, with the help of the commandants wife. THey begin a year long trek south, past Lake Baikal, through Mongolia, across the Gobi, over Tibet and to India and freedom. Hurray! What a triumph of the human spirit. The book had the taint of
An amazing true story of the human spirit's will to live. Russia invaded Poland in 1939 and took hundreds of thousands of Polish soldiers prisoner...One man, the author of this book, not only survived torture in Russian hands, and an inhumane train ride and walk to a Siberian labor camp... but after all that, he decided to escape. He recruited 6 other prisoners to join him and the 7 of them walked to India. Through Siberian blizzards, the Gobi desert's deadly heat, the treacherous landscape of
There is much controversy as to whether this account is fact or fiction. I googled the author's name and the book title and after reading dozens of articles and opinions, I'm still not sure, though I lean towards thinking that the narrative is actually a composite of a number of experiences including Rawicz's.As was said in an account on the web entitled "#18 Anderson's Long Walk Expedition", in which a group of people retraced Rawicz's journey, although on camels not on foot: Attempting to find
A memoir must be an unrewarding thing to write today. So many have been discredited as either full of untruths or completely fabricated. Jerzy Kosinski's "Painted Bird", Carlos Casteneda's "The Teaching of Don Juan", more than a few of Oprah-publicized books, and now (a revelation for me) "The Long Walk", a book that has sold half a million copies since it was first published in 1956. I started to get suspicious about 1/3 of the way through this book. There were too many implausible incidents,
After discovering this story is NOT true as written, i.e., that the author, SÅ‚awomir Rawicz, although indeed a prisoner of a Siberian Soviet prisoner camp, did not escape from one, was instead released, I could not quite enjoy this story in the same way I did the first time I heard it in 2003. But then I suspect this second experience of The Long Walk would have been different even if I had not made that discovery, as I am now 17 years older. It is still a fascinating journey and apparently
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