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A Long Way Home - One POW’s story of escape and evasion during World War II

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The son of a World War I veteran, Charles Granquist was 17 when war was declared with Germany in 1939. He lied about his age, joined the infantry and was sent to Egypt. Like so many other young men at the time, Granquist did not know what to expect. All he really cared about was doing his duty and serving his country. He never even contemplated his chances of becoming a prisoner of war. Captured by the Germans in Greece, Granquist was determined to continue carrying the war to his captors “any way I could”. In his memoir, A Long Way Home, he describes his shame at becoming a POW and how he believed he had failed himself, his mates and as a soldier. He orchestrated a remarkable five escape attempts, all of which ended unsuccessfully. Yet Charles refused to give up, determined to fulfil his duty as an Aussie Digger and make his own small contribution to the war effort. His story takes the reader on the rollercoaster of escape, recapture and 196 days of solitary confinement before his eventual return home with his Russian war bride.Granquist’s account of his wartime experiences adds another important chapter to the story of Australian World War II POWs, while showcasing the spirit, humour, persistence and ingenuity expected of an Aussie Digger. A Long Way Home is tribute to one veteran’s spirit and the mateship he still holds so dear today.There is one thing that a POW learns very quickly and that is only four things matter for survival. They are food, water, shelter and clothing. The absence of any of those essentials makes life very precarious. Having them all allows you to exist, but there is one other thing that makes such an existence mateship. It shines like a beacon through the gloom. It provides the strength to battle on and survive till the sun shines again. To all my old mates, most of whom have since left this earth for that big Stalag somewhere – Thank you! I think of you often with reverence.Charles Granquist

224 pages, Kindle Edition

First published April 1, 2010

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Charles Granquist

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Displaying 1 - 4 of 4 reviews
222 reviews5 followers
May 3, 2019
Australian soldier reviews his tour of duty WW2

Very interesting account , includes his experiences as a pow, romances, marriage and return eventually to Australia, old friends and family.
15 reviews
November 30, 2020
Great read

A book I found hard to put down. What these soldiers, and POW went through is frightening, what they gave up for the next generation is never really appreciated.
Thank you.
1 review
January 19, 2020
Entertaining story

Rather simple story of WWII escapees. Brings to the fore the events of trying to escape in enemy country. Good.
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20 reviews
March 11, 2013
I felt guilty reading this book because I have been reading a lot about the Japanese POWs. I found myself thinking "how lucky!", "those German guards were pleasant", "how much food?!".

And I felt guilty for thinking these things as I am sure it was a horrible experience but it just seems tame compared to the Japanese POWS experience. This is how POWs are treated when the geneva convention is followed.

Well written and an interesting "compare and contrast" but I did not engage emotionally with the protagonist.
Displaying 1 - 4 of 4 reviews

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