When World War II began, Corrie ten Boom was a watchmaker in the Netherlands, but her faith in God prompted her to establish a secret network to protect the Jews in her city, and she was a selfless heroine of the resistance to Hitler and the Nazis. Betrayed, arrested, and sent to the concentration camps, she survived to become one of the 20th century's most important evangelists. Here Stan Guthrie tells the story of how Corrie ten Boom's 1971 memoir, The Hiding Place, came into being, unexpectedly sold millions of copies, and helped to shape the faith of a generation.