No food. No water. Out of ammo. Safety is south. But between there and here is 150 miles of barren desert – freezing at night, boiling in the day – populated solely by Ernst Rommel’s fearsome and deadly Afrika Corps.
What would you do?
Give up? Or get on with it?
For the seven SAS supermen in Damien Lewis’s explosive new audio exclusive, the answer was simple: Escape. Evade. Survive. From the mountains of Italy, to the deserts of Africa, these heroes epitomise the bravery, esprit de corps and daring do of Britain’s finest elite fighting force.
Fans of Ant Middleton’s First Man In and Ben MacIntyre’s SAS: Rogue Heroes are in for a treat, as the SAS’s master chronicler, Damien Lewis, has produced a gripping, heart-in-the-mouth, real-life thriller. A Sunday Times number one best-selling author, this fresh look at the most audacious escapes the SAS made in the Second World War is white-knuckle listening of the highest calibre.
Because if you put a fence in front of these men...they’ll climb it.
Damien Lewis became an author largely by accident, when a British publisher asked him if he'd be willing to turn a TV documentary he was working on into a book. That film was shot in the Sudan war zone, and told the story of how Arab tribes seized black African slaves in horrific slave raids. Lewis had been to the Sudan war zone dozens of times over the past decade, reporting on that conflict for the BBC, Channel 4 and US and European broadcasters.
His slavery documentary told the story of a young girl from the Nuba tribe, seized in a raid and sold into slavery in Khartoum, Sudan's capital city, and of her epic escape. The publisher asked Lewis if the Nuba girl would be willing to write her life story as a book, with his help as co-author. The book that they co-wrote was called 'Slave', and it was published to great acclaim, becoming a number one bestseller and being translated into some 30 lanc guages worldwide. It won several awards and has been made into a feature film.
Over the preceding fifteen years Lewis had reported from many war, conflict and disaster zones – including Sudan, Sierra Leone, Eritrea, Zimbabwe, Nigeria, Iraq, Syria, Burma, Afghanistan and the Balkans (see Author's Gallery). He (and his film crew) traveled into such areas with aid workers, the British or allied military, UN forces or local military groups, or very much under their own steam. He reported on the horror and human impact of war, as well as the drama of conflict itself. Often, he worked alone. Often, he filmed his own material over extended periods of time living in the war or conflict zone.
During a decade spent reporting from around the world Lewis lived in deserts, rainforests, jungles and chaotic third world cities. In his work and travels he met and interviewed people smugglers, diamond miners, Catholic priests 'gone native', desert nomads, un-contacted tribes, aid workers, bush pilots, arms dealers, genocidal leaders, peacekeepers, game wardens, slum kids, world presidents, heroin traffickers, rebel warlords, child prostitutes, Islamist terrorists, Hindu holy men, mercenaries, bush doctors, soldiers, commanders and spies. He was injured, and was hospitalised with bizarre tropical diseases – including flesh-eating bacteria, worms that burrow through the skin and septicemia – but survived all that and continued to report.
It was only natural that having seen so much of global conflict he would be drawn to stories of war, terrorism, espionage and the often dark causes behind such conflicts when he started writing books. Having written a number of true stories, in 2006 he was chosen as one of the 'nation's 20 favourite authors' and wrote his first fiction, Desert Claw, for the British Government's Quick Read initiative. Desert Claw tells of a group of ex-Special Forces soldiers sent into Iraq to retrieve a looted Van Gogh painting, with a savage twist to the tale. That fiction was followed up by Cobra Gold, an equally compelling tale of global drama and intrigue and shadowy betrayal.
Damien Lewis's work, books and films have won the Index on Censorship (UK), CECRA (Spain), Project Censored (US), Commonwealth Relations (UK), Discovery-NHK BANFF (Canada), Rory Peck (UK), BBC One World (UK), BBC-WWF Wildscreen (UK), International Peace Prize (US), Elle Magazine Grande Prix (US), Victor Gollanz (Germany), and BBC One World (UK) Awards. He is a Fellow of the Winston Churchill Memorial Trust, and a Fellow of the Royal Geographical Society.
When talking about the Special Air Service it's hard to avoid superlatives. And the crimes of the Third Reich are so many and so abhorrent that an order issued by Hitler to summarily execute any captured member of the SAS may not seem like much in the context 6,000,000 murdered Jews.
But that order perhaps more than anything else illustrates the price the SAS exacted from their foes. They were the ghosts that every German soldier feared. In fact they were so feared that there are cases where units of the German army avoided engaging the SAS despite vastly outnumbering them.
This book doesn't focus on their operations, their daring raids, rather it paints a more human picture of soldiers escaping capture and through determination and occasionally stubbornness returning to friendly lines.
It's entertaining and informative. The perfect combination.
I have a few Damien Lewis Books in my Library and this is the first one I have managed to read it, the book contains seven separate true stories of members of the SAS escaping from the clutches of the Nazis, all the stories were intriguing describing how the SAS through adversity managed to make their escapes, they were all highly trained and Brave, lots of narrow escapes. I have SAS great escapes two, which I shall be reading very soon and there is a SAS great escapes three which has just been released a book I will be adding to my collection. Highly recommended great read for all Book enthusiasts.
As one comes to expect with Lewis a rip roaring retelling of daring escapes from the Nazis. It also chronicles the establishment of the SAS and is quite an interesting counterpart to ‘Rogue Heroes’. I had feared that 7 stories from the same era might be a big repetitive but they were far from it. Each character was larger than life in his own way and each journey was an extraordinary chronicle of determination in the face of enormous adversity. Thoroughly enjoyable.
This book made WW2 WAAAY more interesting for me. At first, I thought the Third Reich’s crimes were as crazy as It got. Now I’ve read this and plenty of historical fiction and just wandering how much insane stuff can be in one war? Aside from that, this book was awesome and always kept me wandering ‘what’s happening next?’ Or ‘what’s he gonna do now?’. In conclusion, I was satisfied. P.S., what is with Patterson’s random crushes in the beginning?
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
These escapes are testimonies of the miraculous strength and resilious of extraordinary men determined to overcome evil. Well worth a read or listen. The reason for the 3-star rating is certainly not the content but only the delivery. There are certain nonfiction authors gifted with their method of narration that is captivating and lyrical. I didn't feel this way about "Seven Great Escapes..." Nevertheless these are still incredible stories of perseverance and heroics that should be celebrated..
Very good content, interesting stories but avoid the audiobook. The narrator is dull, accents are poor and had to speed it up just to make it tolerable.
For reasons that should be obvious in a maggat usa 2.0, I’m focusing on books about those who resist and defeat fascism. The stories of these men demonstrate resilience, toughness, and grit in the face of a powerful foe who could wear, at times, a genial or banal face, sometimes even showing kindness, while at the same time wanting to exterminate those opposed to their power and control. In that sense this is an excellent book. I do think at times it goes a bit easy on Germans and Italians and French collaborators who were ‘only following orders’ and that the myth of ‘clean Germans’ who fought for hitler’s Germany, serving hitler’s goals and agenda, and unleashing the most murderous war in history is unfortunately present here. That almost makes me rate this at 3 stars, but the stories of these SAS men are too valuable and too well told for that, so I’ll call it 3.5.
Stirring accounts of bravery, persistence, and resilience mark each narrative in this rousing piece of non-fiction. The determination of the protagonist in each chapter (each chapter recounts a true-life story of escape and evasion from enemy forces) highlights just how elite this unit was. Some of them endured unbelievable suffering - some multiple times! And all of them exhibited a deeply rooted commitment to their country and the cause of freedom. Fun, yet thought-provoking, read.
Thoroughly researched and with access to the Regiments War Diaries each of these seven escapes could be a book in their own right. The individual stories grip you from the outset, the detail of operations and characters is extraordinary. Hugely recommended.
3.5 really, great stories, I did the audio book and kept getting distracted by the sound quality changing so you could tell every session of recording. A bit too much repititiob about back ground, I guess you're not supposed to listen to each chapter back to back
A very enjoyable read which was very different to my usual books. I would recommend if you have an interest in war time of the past and/or the armed services and how they operate. Some incredibly interesting stories about war heroes and their heroic escapes!
Damien Lewis has done it again. A fascinating read detailing the missions and escapes of men who gave everything without thought to wreak havoc on the German war machine
Yet another excellent and interesting read about SAS in WW2 from DL. Incredible bravery and ingenuity as individuals from the special forces escape from AXIS forces. Well told as ever.
This book was amazing. I couldn't put it down, just like all the other works of Damien Lewis. The stories seemed mythical but are all 100% true, pure, amazing history.
Highly readable and exciting account of 7 word war ii escapes. Really helps to shine a light on the reality of SOE/ SAS style operations and risks in that war. At times reads like a thriller.