REVIEW - ESCAPE TO LIVE (1947) I finished reading Escape to Live by Edward Howell a couple of weeks ago. The author tells his story of frequently unlikely survival through fighting (airborne and on land), injury, inprisonment, and escape from German-occupied Greece during WWII. It's not entirely the adventure story that one might expect, since a good portion of the book concerns his many months in German POW hospitals, starving and in poor conditions. In recalling this time, during much of which he was unable to move at all due to his injuries, the book adopts a philosophical aspect as Howell recalls his endless state of self reflection and reactions to his surroundings. Eventually in a sudden vision, he discovers religion, from which he takes inspiration to attempt his long-planned escape. Undertaken on his own, even with his arms and hands largely crippled, and while suffering from a fever. This discovery of God isn't in tune with my own convictions, but he writes of it as a personal discovery. Of someone who in spite of a Christian upbringing was before that point a firm non-believer, and as such it's generally not overly preachy (even though his father was in fact a priest). Certainly his journey through the Greek countryside, largely avoiding roads and towns for fear of German patrols, and without any real plan to secure his escape from a country where many of its own population also wished to flee, proved extremely fortunate. He attributes that to God, whereas I would put it down to a conflation of coincidence, but the inspiration he found from religion seems to have been essential to him either way. His writing is very personal, rarely much embellished, and written from his perspective at the time, including before his religious conversion. I found it quite compelling, including his recollections of some other characters whom he met, which included quite a number of Australian soldiers and Army doctors whose presence in Greece during WWII isn't as well remembered here today as the fighting elsewhere. After the war Howell became active with a movement called Moral Re-Armament, founded shortly before the war around the idea of reshaping the world through the embrace of Christian morals. My 1948 copy of Escape to Live even has a sticker inside the cover with the details of their Melbourne office, although it isn't mentioned in the text. His ending thoughts reflect the movement's ideology on finding inner freedom through faith and using this perceived effect to reshape the post-war society to build more moral world than that which preceeded and created the war. Beyond the scope of the Moral Re-Armament movement, this seems to reflect a general sense of opportunity to move society in a new direction that dominated the social fabric of the post-war era. Until the following generation grew up to actively reject those morals imposed upon them, ironically in much the way that Howell seems to have initially rejected his own religious upbringing - going so far as to deliberately fly aerobatic maneuvers on sundays over the church where his father preached. While clearly unsuccessful at reshaping the world through the power of Christian faith, a modern incarnation of the Moral Re-Armament movement has created a web presence for the late Edward Howell, who died in 2000. The obituary preserved on their website seems to be the source for a reference to "the BBC Television series Deliverance, screened some years ago" in their short biography about him, for which I cannot find any other reference online. Since that would probably date the TV series to the 80s or 90s it must be archived somewhere, but either not available online or simply impossible to find with such a generic title. That website does however offer a PDF of the last, 1981, edition of the book for free download here: https://www.foranewworld.org/material/publications/escape-live-1981-edition I'd certainly recommend it to someone of a mind such as myself towards both historic wartime adventure and timeless self-reflection. There's also an interview with him about his WWII experiences which touches on many key points of the book, albeit with a more particular view on his religious experience since it was clearly undertaken for the audience of the Moral Re-Armament community: https://www.foranewworld.org/material/articles/interview-edward-howell - The Free Thinker