
Cornelius Rost (1919–1983)
Author of As Far as My Feet Will Carry Me
Works by Cornelius Rost
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Other names
- Forell, Clemens (pseudonym)
- Birthdate
- 1919-03-27
- Date of death
- 1983-10-18
- Gender
- male
- Occupations
- soldier
printer - Organizations
- Wehrmacht
- Nationality
- Germany
- Birthplace
- Kufstein, Tyrol, Austria
- Places of residence
- Munich, Germany
- Place of death
- Munich, Bavaria, West Germany
- Burial location
- Central Cemetery, Munich, Germany
- Map Location
- Austria
Members
Reviews
Determined not to die in a Siberian gulag, German prisoner of war Josef Bauer stages a daring escape. He will spend the next two years of his life wandering across frozen wastelands, dependent on local villagers for hospitality and at risk from both Soviet patrols and fellow fugitives from the law. This is a fabulous adventure story and I particularly enjoyed the passages describing local tribal culture, but something is missing. Bauer's macho stiff-upper-lip writing style leaves the story show more lacking the emotional resonance it needs to capture the reader. show less
Josef Martin Bauer's "As far as my feet will carry me" is the extraordinary true story of a German prisoner of war who is sentenced to work in a lead mine in Siberia. The prisoner, dubbed "Clemens Forell" manages to escape and embarks on a three-year trek across the Russian landscape while attempting to reach his home.
The story is pretty amazing. I had a difficult time with the writing, which is best described as stilted. Despite being a short book, it took me ages to read it... the author show more is so detached from the story that it makes the book difficult to read. I perhaps would have liked it better if it were written in the first person.
This book is very similar to Slavomir Rawicz's "The Long Walk" which I've read many times. While veracity of Rawicz's book has long been questioned (and with good reason, I think,) Bauer's book comes with a greater ring of truth to it. show less
The story is pretty amazing. I had a difficult time with the writing, which is best described as stilted. Despite being a short book, it took me ages to read it... the author show more is so detached from the story that it makes the book difficult to read. I perhaps would have liked it better if it were written in the first person.
This book is very similar to Slavomir Rawicz's "The Long Walk" which I've read many times. While veracity of Rawicz's book has long been questioned (and with good reason, I think,) Bauer's book comes with a greater ring of truth to it. show less
A really good survival book. A German prisoner is brought to the very east of Siberia together with many other prisoners of war to be a slave. He gets help from a doctor to escape and then the story gets really interesting. All the struggles he had to endure, it is hard to comprehend even after reading this book.
I really enjoyed reading it. Loved his dog. Wished that the end had been a bit more prolonged though.
I really enjoyed reading it. Loved his dog. Wished that the end had been a bit more prolonged though.
As Far as My Feet Will Carry Me: The Extraordinary True Story of One Man's Escape from a Siberian Labor Camp and His 3-Year Trek to Freedom by Josef Martin Bauer
This well-written story tells of one German soldier’s escape from a Siberian labor camp and his cross county trek to return home. It has excellent detail, pacing, and descriptions of the landscape and people encountered.
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Associated Authors
Statistics
- Works
- 1
- Members
- 443
- Popularity
- #55,290
- Rating
- 4.1
- Reviews
- 10
- ISBNs
- 32
- Languages
- 8

