The Confidence Men: How Two Prisoners of War Engineered the Most Remarkable Escape in History

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4.5
2 reviews
Ebook
352
Pages
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About this ebook

NATIONAL BESTSELLER • The Great Escape for the Great War: the astonishing true story of two World War I prisoners who pulled off one of the most ingenious escapes of all time.

FINALIST FOR THE EDGAR® AWARD • ONE OF THE BEST BOOKS OF THE YEAR: The Washington Post, NPR • “Fox unspools Jones and Hill’s delightfully elaborate scheme in nail-biting episodes that advance like a narrative Rube Goldberg machine.”—The New York Times Book Review

Imprisoned in a remote Turkish POW camp during World War I, having survived a two-month forced march and a terrifying shootout in the desert, two British officers, Harry Jones and Cedric Hill, join forces to bamboozle their iron-fisted captors. To stave off despair and boredom, Jones takes a handmade Ouija board and fakes elaborate séances for his fellow prisoners. Word gets around, and one day an Ottoman official approaches Jones with a query: Could Jones contact the spirit world to find a vast treasure rumored to be buried nearby? Jones, a trained lawyer, and Hill, a brilliant magician, use the Ouija board—and their keen understanding of the psychology of deception—to build a trap for their captors that will ultimately lead them to freedom. 

A gripping nonfiction thriller, The Confidence Men is the story of one of the only known con games played for a good cause—and of a profound but unlikely friendship. Had it not been for “the Great War,” Jones, the Oxford-educated son of a British lord, and Hill, a mechanic on an Australian sheep ranch, would never have met. But in pain, loneliness, hunger, and isolation, they formed a powerful emotional and intellectual alliance that saved both of their lives. 

Margalit Fox brings her “nose for interesting facts, the ability to construct a taut narrative arc, and a Dickens-level gift for concisely conveying personality” (Kathryn Schulz, New York) to this tale of psychological strategy that is rife with cunning, danger, and moments of high farce that rival anything in Catch-22.

Ratings and reviews

4.5
2 reviews
Bill Franklin
March 12, 2022
We love stories of daring escapes from a prisoner of war camp. The daring. The bravery. The improbability. The patience and planning, sometimes accomplishing just a tiny amount of daily progress that succeeds over a long period of time. The cheering for the underdog against the powerful. Even when we know the end, we hold our breath. Someone sneaks across and cuts the fence just making it between the sweeps of the spotlight. Prisoners who dig a tunnel, shoring it up with wood from their beds dumping the dirt by releasing it from bags in their pants legs in the prison yard when guards are not looking. This book is about an escape attempt of a wholly different kind and proof that truth is stranger than fiction. It couldn’t have been a novel, because it wouldn’t have been deemed believable. First, the two conspirators. Elias Henry Jones was Oxford-educated and the son of a Welsh lord, a magistrate in Burma before the beginning of the Great War (WW I). Cedric Waters Hill was an Australian mechanic who had become a pilot and also an amateur sleight-of-hand artist. Both ended up in a Turkish prison camp in Yozgad, central Anatolia, a place so remote that guard towers and tall fences were unnecessary because there was no way anyone could hope to escape on foot. The two prisoners fashioned a Ouija board and performed sleight-of-hand “magic” as entertainment for fellow prisoners, but succeeded so well that even their friends couldn’t be convinced that it wasn’t real. The guards and the Turkish translator assigned to the prison even started attending and asking questions. That’s when they realized that, by keeping up their act and perfecting it further, they might be able to use it to engineer an escape. The author points out that the time was just right. There had been a renewal of spiritual interest in the late 1800s. The phonograph could preserve a voice to be played back at will and few could fathom how that could be done just by a needle picking up vibrations from invisible bumps on a piece of vinyl. The telephone could instantanesously transport a voice over miles of wire leading a prominent Philadelpia newspaper to warn its readers not to talk to sick people on the phone for fear of catching their disease. And now you could even do it wirelessly by radio. If that was possible, why weren’t there potential channels for communicating with the dead? Locally, the Armenian genocide, in which estimates say 90 percent of the Armenians in the Ottoman Empire were killed, was still recent and the prison superintendant had heard rumors of rich Armenians having hidden their wealth before trying to flee the area. And thus the beginnings of the con. The book provides us with the same plot-twists, changes of plans, and near-misses of any escape narrative but in a story so wild that it is unlike anything you’ve read before. There are times when it seems like a “McHale’s Navy” or “Gilligan’s Island” type of comedy and other times when it’s so serious that you’re convinced that it is over. The book’s weakness is that it is too long. While some of the digressions are helpful to understand the times and explain how they could have fooled their captors, the detailed explanations of psychology, spiritualism, magician’s tricks, confidence games, and manipulation tactics is sometimes too long and distracting. But, fortunately you can skim when your interest wanes because the story itself is so good. This is just fun and what makes it even more exciting is that it is true. I can’t think of anyone who wouldn’t enjoy this book.
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Janice Tangen
September 2, 2021
WW1, military-history, historical-places-events, historical-research, history-and-culture, Turkey, prisoners-of-war, nonfiction, POW***** Incredible and inspiring. Existing in horrible conditions after having been starved out and captured, two ingenious British soldiers housed in a Turkish camp manage to scam their way to freedom. I found it fascinating and all the better because it is well-researched and documented nonfiction. I requested and received a free temporary ebook from Random House Publishing Group/Random House, via NetGalley. Thank you!
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About the author

Margalit Fox originally trained as a cellist and a linguist before pursuing journalism. As a senior writer in The New York Times’s celebrated Obituary News Department, she wrote the front-page public sendoffs of some of the leading cultural figures of our age. Winner of the William Saroyan Prize for Literature and author of three previous books, Conan Doyle for the Defense, The Riddle of the Labyrinth, and Talking Hands, Fox lives in Manhattan with her husband, the writer and critic George Robinson.

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