The ever growing eminence of politics all around the globe has compelled writers to express their relevant views time and time again. This is for the most part to make people aware of the political tools employed by leaders and the affects of the decisions taken by them on behalf of an entire nation. Politics, just another science with its many logics and interpretations, could not have been anymore minimally put than the words lined up within Corrie Ten Boom’s ‘The hiding place’ which was perhaps a vintage best-seller in the 1970′s.
This book is an inspirational autobiography written in the year 1971 and it was dedicated to an inspirational figure named Corrie Ten Boom. The authors of this book are the very brilliant John and Elizabeth Sherill of course while having Corrie Ten Boom on board herself to give the book just the right tinge of realism. This book according to the authors was at first based on another notion that would have entitled the book as the ‘God’s smuggler’ but that’s when Corrie Ten Boom’s remarkable anecdote struck their creative minds. This led them to believe in the fact that it would have been a great loss for the literary world if this book was not written. This book was written during the time when Nazi’s took over the realm of Holland; Nazi stands for National Socialist German workers party which worked under ‘Adolph Hitler’ and carried forward a German ideology which was based on their revenge from the Jews who were successful in executing their conspiracy by the end of World War I. They primarily supported Pan-German views, welfare of the state, taxation, racism, economic and political liberalism and last but certainly not the least anti-communism.