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Bestsellers
The Libertarian Reader: Classic and Contemporary Writings from Lao Tzu to Milton Friedman
An Enormous Crime: The Definitive Account of American POWs Abandoned in Southeast Asia
Shooting at the Moon: The Story of America's Clandestine War in Laos
The LIBERTARIAN READER: Classic & Contemporary Writings from Lao-Tzu to Milton Friedman
Covert Ops: The CIA's Secret War In Laos
Laos: From Buffer State to Crossroads? (Mekong Press)
Here There Are Tigers: The Secret Air War in Laos, 1968-69 (Stackpole Military History Series)
Jesus and Lao Tzu: The Parallel Sayings
One Day Too Long
Flying Through Midnight: A Pilot's Dramatic Story of His Secret Missions Over Laos During the Vietnam War

Escape from Laos

Author: Dieter Dengler
Publisher: Presidio Press
Category: Book

Buy New: $16.50



New (4) Used (6) from $16.50

Avg. Customer Rating: 5.0 out of 5 stars 16 reviews
Sales Rank: 238891

Media: Paperback
Number Of Items: 1
Pages: 228
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.7
Dimensions (in): 8.5 x 5.8 x 0.8

ISBN: 089141293X
Dewey Decimal Number: 959.70437
EAN: 9780891412939
ASIN: 089141293X

Publication Date: June 1996
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days

Editorial Reviews:

Product Description
Dengler's story is a valuable contribution to the literature of survival as well as to the literature of the war.


Customer Reviews:   Read 11 more reviews...

5 out of 5 stars The Real Deal   July 24, 2008
This is the real story of Dieter Dengler's experiences in Laos. When compared to the movie RESCUE DAWN, it becomes obvious that the movie is a lot closer to the truth than it's critics advocate.


5 out of 5 stars Riveting!   May 26, 2008
I finished this book on Memorial Day 2008. It is still relevant to our
position of freedom and life.



4 out of 5 stars Very Interesting   May 8, 2008
Escape From Laos is truly an amazing tale of survival. Having a first hand perspective like no one else has, Dengler tells this story with almost no emotion, describing each terrible situation without shying away from the reality or overdramatizing. A quick and interesting read.


5 out of 5 stars The ultimate survival manual   February 18, 2008
 2 out of 2 found this review helpful

Best book I read in 2007 and I'm squeamish about war narratives. Riveting, astounding, a profile of courage and mental agility. This is the bible of survival techniques.

I shudder to think what details were edited OUT of this book.

I also recommend the film "Little Dieter Needs to Fly" where Dengler himself takes one back to the scene of these horrors.Little Dieter needs to Fly



5 out of 5 stars shackletonesque   August 17, 2007
 9 out of 9 found this review helpful

On February 1, 1966 the American pilot Dieter Dengler (1938-2001) took enemy fire and crash-landed his plane in Laos while on a secret mission. After surviving in the jungle on his own he was captured, tortured (hung upside down with an ant nest around his neck, submerged in a well, dragged by an ox through a village), then taken on a three-week jungle trek to a Pathet Lao prison camp called Par Kung. Dengler recalls that it was nothing like he imagined a prison camp might be, but instead a tiny enclave of a few huts exactly twenty-one by twenty-two steps in size. There he met six other POWS, two American and four Asian (which later became a source of tension), who had been imprisoned as long as two and a half years. Later they were transferred to the very similar Hoi Het camp. When starvation threatened both the prisoners and the guards, and the prisoners overheard the guards saying that they planned to shoot them, they made an elaborate plan and escaped. The fellow POWS were separated after the escape, and Dengler and his buddy Duane Martin teamed up. Lice, leeches, ticks, ants ("the true torment of the jungle"), sweltering days and cold nights, torrential rain, dumb mistakes and incredibly good luck, and the human will to survive--these are only part of Dengler's first person narrative. Incredibly, after soldiering on for so long, Dengler and Martin stumbled onto some villagers, scared them, and in the space of a minute they had beheaded Duane. After surviving twenty-three days in the jungle after his escape, hallucinations, wandering in a circle, tumbling over water falls, and eating things you never should eat, Dengler was rescued in an improbable stroke of luck. He lost sixty pounds in the six-month ordeal. In 1997 Werner Herzog made a documentary about Dengler called Little Dieter Needs to Fly. More recently Herzog dramatized this survivor's tale in the film Rescue Dawn (2007). This is a gripping book that reminded me of Alfred Lansing's Endurance about Shackleton's Antarctic survival story.


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