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List Price: $12.99Amazon.com's Price: $11.04 You Save: $1.95 (15%)Prices subject to change.
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Binding: Paperback
Dewey Decimal Number: 940.5472092
EAN: 9780007118489
ISBN: 0007118481
Label: Zondervan
Manufacturer: Zondervan
Number Of Items: 1
Number Of Pages: 248
Publication Date: May 01, 2002
Publisher: Zondervan
Sales Rank: 111970
Studio: Zondervan
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Editorial Review:
Product Description: The best-selling classic of the power of love and forgiveness in a Japanese prisoner of war camp.
Average Rating: 
Rating: -
I assume that this book is similar if not the same as Ernest Gordnn's original work, Through the Valley of the Kwai. I read the original 3o years ago and became a disciple of Jesus Christ as a result. No other work better illustrates how the love of God affects man than this work.
Rating: -
This was one of the most moving Christian testimonies I have read. It is the amazing biography of Ernest Gordon, a British POW in Japanese occupied Thailand. The book is more than that though. The personal and historical account of To End All Wars provides the reader with tremendous hope born in the midst of suffering. In the same spirit as Corrie Ten Boon's the Hiding Place, this work writes about the difficulty of finding and protecting the value of human life through the power of God's love and ... Read More
Rating: -
My wife and I had watched the movie a couple months ago (be warned: it is incredibly brutal) and been moved by the power of the story. Unfortunately, as it turned out, the book and the move are not the same story. In fact, other than the similarity of the major premise (a British officer in a Japanese POW camp during WW2), they had almost nothing in common.
However. . .
That was only disappointing insomuch as I kept waiting for certain events from the movie to show up. The ... Read More
Rating: -
This is one of the best books I've read so far... Though it may appear repetitive at times (there's really little else the author could write about beside what's happening in the POW camps along the Kwai), the reflection on the human condition and the supreme virtue of self-sacrifice in the footsteps of Jesus Christ is written with much poignancy and profundity. The epilogue is a tour de force for its penetrating criticism of the 'civilised' society the author returned to after the war. The reverse culture ... Read More
Rating: -
It's a difficult, but true message. The author takes an unflinching look at the evil that men are capable of through his own personal experience in Japanese prison camps and carries you through the experience on to the brilliant hope on the other side of his own personal pain. The underlying truth you discover is the genuine potential to be found in one man's selfless, sacrificial care for another. It's an excellent read.
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