'This is a gripping and deeply moving account of a modern pilgrim’s progress.
'Born in England during an air-raid in World War l, Naomi Echlin came in early childhood to live in Tasmania with her parents. She writes vividly of the turbulent post-war depression years that followed - an only child tossed in a sea of stormy relationships at home, at school and abroad.
'There are two interventions of the Spirit that redirect her life - the personal and global challenge of the world work of Moral Re-Armament, along with conversion to a satisfying faith in the Roman Catholic Church. This voyage of discovery is related with refreshing honesty and a buoyant humour. The power of hope and faith disperses the fog of cynicism and despair.'
English