By Neal Bascomb
Houghton, Mifflin Harcourt, Boston, 2018
James M. Gallen, Reviewer
James M. Gallen, Reviewer
Captain David Gray, Lead Tunneler |
The artists are generally British pilots and soldiers held in German POW camps. Escape was their duty. To attempt this the prisoners played a cat-and-mouse game with their guards, most prominently Captain Niemeyer, the brutal buffoon who keeps showing up to torment men who organize breakouts under his eyes despite his oafish efforts to foil them.
Pilots were not issued parachutes, and those who carried emergency kits with rations, maps, and tools were chastised as unwilling to fight to the bitter end. Prospects for a surrendering British soldier or airman were bleak. One in five were shot or bayoneted in the act. The wounded often died without treatment. Those who survived to be taken prisoner were robbed of everything of value before being marched off to spare and overcrowded camps where food was short, clothes threadbare, sanitation poor, and disease cut a broad swath. Officers had it better than enlisted men, but is it any wonder all ranks longed to escape?
Escapees Blain, Gray, and Kennard in Their Disguises |
Those who got away from the camps hid by day and crawled through fields in darkness, snuck through the towns that could not be avoided, and purchased and used railway tickets. Camps were situated close enough to the Dutch border to provide fugitives with a fighting chance of reaching neutral territory. The Kaiser was not the first to seek refuge in the Netherlands.
In The Escape Artists author Neal Bascomb has crafted a history, an adventure, an inspiring tribute to the human spirit of freedom. I'd better stop. More could be a spoiler and you do not want that. Pick up and enjoy!
James M. Gallen
Great review, James. " The Kaiser was not the first to seek refuge in the Netherlands" - heh.
ReplyDeleteI can't imagine what it would feel like to think you're safe in Holland only to be arrested in Germany!
ReplyDeleteI'm reminded of Pyke's adventures - if I might link to one of my earlier posts:
ReplyDeletehttps://roadstothegreatwar-ww1.blogspot.com/2016/10/the-ingenious-mr-pyke-inventor-fugitive.html
For a genuine first-hand account of WW1 escapers, try Duncan Grinnell-Milne's books "Wind in the Wires" and "An Escaper's Log". I wonder if he features in the book being reviewed? He was an RFC pilot who was captured in November 1915 when he landed with engine failure; he made several breakouts that ended in re-capture, before making it to Holland in March 1918. He flew in action again on the Western Front in SE5as before the war ended.
ReplyDeleteInteresting person. Went on to write a lot, it seems.
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