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The Long Walk: The True Story of a Trek to Freedom
The Long Walk: The True Story of a Trek to Freedom

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Author: Slavomir Rawicz
Publisher: The Lyons Press
Category: Book

List Price: $16.95
Buy New: $6.44
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New (34) Used (27) from $6.40

Avg. Customer Rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars 294 reviews
Sales Rank: 6373

Media: Paperback
Number Of Items: 1
Pages: 256
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.7
Dimensions (in): 8.8 x 6 x 0.8

ISBN: 1592289444
Dewey Decimal Number: 940.5472470957
EAN: 9781592289448
ASIN: 1592289444

Publication Date: April 1, 2006
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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Similar Items:

  • We Die Alone: A WWII Epic of Escape and Endurance
  • Touching the Void: The True Story of One Man's Miraculous Survival
  • The Jungle is Neutral: A Soldier's Two-Year Escape from the Japanese Army
  • As Far as My Feet Will Carry Me: The Extraordinary True Story of One Man's Escape from a Siberian Labour Camp and His 3-Year Trek to Freedom
  • Skeletons on the Zahara: A True Story of Survival

Editorial Reviews:

Amazon.com Review
Cavalry officer Slavomir Rawicz was captured by the Red Army in 1939 during the German-Soviet partition of Poland and was sent to the Siberian Gulag along with other captive Poles, Finns, Ukranians, Czechs, Greeks, and even a few English, French, and American unfortunates who had been caught up in the fighting. A year later, he and six comrades from various countries escaped from a labor camp in Yakutsk and made their way, on foot, thousands of miles south to British India, where Rawicz reenlisted in the Polish army and fought against the Germans. The Long Walk recounts that adventure, which is surely one of the most curious treks in history.

Product Description
"I hope The Long Walk will remain as a memorial to all those who live and die for freedom, and for all those who for many reasons could not speak for themselves."--Slavomir Rawicz

In 1941, the author and six other fellow prisoners escaped a Soviet labor camp in Yakutsk--a camp where enduring hunger, cold, untended wounds, untreated illnesses, and avoiding daily executions were everyday feats. Their march--over thousands of miles by foot--out of Siberia, through China, the Gobi Desert, Tibet, and over the Himalayas to British India is a remarkable statement about man's desire to be free.

While the original book sold hundreds of thousands of copies, this updated paperback version includes a new Afterword by the author, as well as the author's Foreword to the Polish book. Written in a hauntingly detailed, no holds barred way, the new edition of The Long Walk is destined to outrank its classic status and guaranteed to forever stay in the reader's mind.






Customer Reviews:   Read 289 more reviews...

5 out of 5 stars A Story You'll Never Forget.   December 11, 2000
 90 out of 107 found this review helpful

Although The Long Walk is well written, that has nothing to do with why it's a good book. People should read this book because it chronicles perhaps the most extraordinary true story of human endurance in recorded history.

Slavomir Rawicz is unjustly imprisoned by the Communist Russians early in World War II. He is confined to a cell so small that he literally cannot sit, but must sleep by collapsing with his knees against the wall and his feet steeped in his own waste. He is later transported to Siberia by train, and then marched through the cold countryside to a Soviet Gulag, witnessing the death by exposure and exhaustion of other unfortunate captives along the way. In the prison camp he is set in forced labor, kept in horrendous conditions, over-worked, and underfed.

Near the end of his rope, Rawicz and a handful of companions orchestrate a daring and desperate escape, and then proceed to run for their lives, on foot, toward freedom in India--4,000 miles away. Then the fun begins. They must conquer the frozen Siberian tundra, the Gobi desert, the Himalayan Mountains, starvation, the Soviets, and their own inner demons.

Slavomir's ordeal overshadows every other survival tale I've every read, including Admiral Scott's Polar expedition and Krakauer's Everest disaster. This is up there with the Donner Expedition in terms of grim conditions and the indomitable human spirit. Trust me. If you've got a teenager who's complaining because they think they have it rough, let 'em read this one. --Christopher Bonn Jonnes, author of Wake Up Dead.


5 out of 5 stars Great Story of Endurance and Quest for Liberty   May 12, 2003
 87 out of 109 found this review helpful

The story in a nutshell: A Polish Army officer is captured by the Soviets after they have joined Hitler in dismembering his country. Rawicz (the officer) is tortured in the Soviet prison system and sent to the Gulags. Faced with misery in Siberia and probable death, he and a band of others escape and undertake a two thousand-mile long journey from the snows of Siberia through Mongolia, the Gobi Desert, and across the Himalayas toward British India and freedom.

This is a great story. The author describes the mindless torture under the Soviet system in a manner that should persuade any reader of the evil of totalitarianism. The description of his train journey, hundred-mile winter hike through a Siberian winter to his gulag and life in the camp is fascinating. His will to survive amidst degradation, the elements and overwhelming odds are a testament to the human thirst for freedom and liberty.

As other reviewers have stated, there are some parts of the book that invite skepticism. His befriending by the camp commandant's wife seems as improbable as it is crucial to his ability to escape. The escapees journey across the Gobi Desert where his group went for many days without water beyond what I understood a person could tolerate. Without any climbing tools, his party went across the Himalayas to India -- a feat that seems fantastic. Also his brief description of spotting what could only be described as the elusive Yetti in the Himalayas stretches credibility (unless it does actually exist).

That being said, this story is exhilarating and I found it believable and enthralling. It is a wonderful adventure story and describes the limits of what the human spirit and mind can endure to survive in freedom. This book has been around for almost fifty years and was given wide play when first introduced. I'm going to assume the lack of anything debunking this widely told tale (or, anything that I could find) argues for the author's veracity -- certainly that frame of mind allows one to enjoy a stirring story.


1 out of 5 stars A great "story," but unfortunately it's only a story   December 18, 2005
 56 out of 70 found this review helpful

In The Long Walk, Slavomir Rawicz tells the story of his escape from a WWII Soviet prison camp and his long walk to freedom. The story is gripping, even painful at times; but it has one major problem: it is probably not a true story.

This book's genesis came when a British reporter in the 1950s was doing research on Yeti sightings and came across Slavomir Rawicz, who claimed to have seen an unidentified "monster" after escaping from a Soviet prison camp. After meeting with Rawicz, the reporter realized that the story of Rawicz's escape is a much better story and helps Rawicz write the story of the escape and long trek.

Although the impetus of the story should raise some doubts with the reader (a Yeti sighting), because the book is billed as "the True Story of a Trek to Freedom," the reader quickly becomes engrossed in the story. Rawicz was a Polish Army officer captured by the Germans at the beginning of World War II and sent to a work camp deep in Siberia. Rawicz and some companions engineered an escape, and for the next year they traveled southward trying to escape Soviet Russia. At times they were at the verge of starvation, and the reader cannot help but feel real pain when Rawicz tells of the companions who died along the trip, but they persevered through the cold of Siberia and the heat of the Gobi desert before finally meeting some British soldiers in India.

It's a real triumph - but, it's likely not true. As Anne Applebaum points out in her Pulitzer Prize-winning history Gulag, most experts who have examined this story find it "unconvincing." No one has been able to locate any records from Rawicz's time as a prisoner, and one of the leading Russian historians of the Gulag carried on correspondence with Rawicz and does not believe his story. [EDIT: In October 2006, the BBC found some records that show that Rawicz was a prisoner in the Gulag but was released by the NKVD and sent to a refugee camp in Iran. He did not escape and flee with a small band of ex-prisoners through the frozen wastelands of Siberia or through the Gobi Desert en route to India.] The fact that many want to believe this inspiring story shouldn't overcome the fact that experts who have corresponded with the author, who have searched for his records, and who have seriously considered the details of his escape, do not believe this story.

This book's power lies in the premise that it's a true story; but if you take that away, it's just a hoax that has been played on generations of readers.



1 out of 5 stars nobody should believe this book   October 22, 2004
 32 out of 50 found this review helpful

This book is a fake. Its been known to be a fake for decades
but for unknown reasons many people would rather read a fake
book about the USSR than read real accounts of people who
suffered horribly under stalinism and communism.

Why is it a fake? There is nothing in it (including the
identity of the author) that can be proved out.

No such person as "Slavomir Rawicz" was an officer in the
polish army or the polish army in exile. No such person
appears in the soviet records and neither does the camp
he claims he was at. There is no evidence of his ever having
been in India. It would be different if some parts of his
story at least could be confirmed by others, but not one
single part of it can be proved by anything but his word to
have happened.

Those who promote this FRAUD are doing a terrible injustice
to the real victims of the soviet system. Why anyone would
choose to ignore true stories of poles and others supported
by facts in favor of a ghost written book full of nonsense up
to and including an encounter with a snowman is beyond reason.

If you want to learn about polish officers in the USSR, a
fact to start with is that tens of thousands of them were
executed and thrown into mass graves. Others were put into
real camps in the gulag and then found there way out either
by escape or through the releases that were arranged by
strong men who did not forget them and forced the soviet union
to release many of the remaining survivors.

Those stories are real and the brave actions of those involved
is real. Those who promote this work of fiction and fraud
are doing a disgrace to the memory of a great many victims
of stalinism.




1 out of 5 stars A Patent Fabrication   May 27, 2003
 31 out of 36 found this review helpful

I am an avid outdoorsman with experience in long distance hiking and backcountry winter travel. I love TRUE survival stories, but this one is not only false but obviously so. It is simply not possible to bushwhack 20-30 miles a day through deep snow with almost no food and no water as recounted in the Northern part of the trek - and to make that distance in actual forward progress with no map.

He also claims to have gone 8 and then 12 days with no water in the Gobi desert in the heat of summer while walking miles and miles each day. This also is impossible as survival without water in these conditions is limited to a very few days at best.

It's also full of all kinds of "little" howlers like the idea that when they got to the Gobi desert between the eight of them they only pot or pan they had was a single mug they'd taken from the prison camp. They hadn't even managed to scavenge a tin can. Right.

I love the American, "Mr. Smith", who doesn't reveal his first name throughout the entire epic. Maybe he was really Agent K. Or was it J.

In the end, it's ever so convienient that he loses track of all of his fellow survivors so "coincidentally" there is no one to corroborate this absurd story.

I've really only scratched the surface.

If you want some incredible survival stories you can believe try "Endurance" - an account of the Shackleton Expedition, Touching The Void by Joe Simpson, or Adrift by Steven Callahan.

=Steve Dunn=

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