Laura Hillenbrand

Unbroken: A World War II Story of Survival, Resilience, and Redemption

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  • Vitalyhas quoted7 years ago
    His conviction that everything happened for a reason, and would come to good, gave him a laughing equanimity even in hard times.
  • Vitalyhas quoted7 years ago
    The paradox of vengefulness is that it makes men dependent upon those who have harmed them, believing that their release from pain will come only when they make their tormentors suffer
  • Vitalyhas quoted8 years ago
    Louie had regarded every limitation placed on him as a challenge to his wits, his resourcefulness, and his determination to rebel.
  • Johanna Ivanova de Mendozahas quoted9 years ago
    liced effervescent lines in the water around their faces. The firing blazed on, then sputtered out as the bomber overshot them. The men dragged themselves back onto the one raft that was stil mostly inflated. The bomber banked sideways, circling toward them again. As it leveled off, Zamperini could see the muzzles of the machine guns, aimed directly at them.
    Zamperini looked toward his crewmates. They were too weak to go back in the water. As they lay down on the floor of the raft, hands over their heads, Zamperini splashed overboard alone.
    Somewhere beneath him, the sharks were done waiting. They bent their bodies in the water and swam toward the man under the
  • Johanna Ivanova de Mendozahas quoted9 years ago
    PREFACE

    ALL HE COULD SEE, IN EVERY DIRECTION, WAS WATER. It was June 23, 1943. Somewhere on the endless expanse of the Pacific Ocean, Army Air Forces bombardier and Olympic runner Louie Zamperini lay across a smal raft, drifting westward. Slumped alongside him was a sergeant, one of his plane’s gunners. On a separate raft, tethered to the first, lay another crewman, a gash zigzagging across his forehead. Their bodies, burned by the sun and stained yel ow from the raft dye, had winnowed down to skeletons. Sharks glided in lazy loops around them, dragging their backs along the rafts, waiting.
    The men had been adrift for twenty-seven days. Borne by an equatorial current, they had floated at least one thousand miles, deep into Japanese-control ed waters. The rafts were beginning to deteriorate into jel y, and gave off a sour, burning odor. The men’s bodies were pocked with salt sores, and their lips were so swol en that they pressed into their nostrils and chins. They spent their days with their eyes fixed on the sky, singing “White Christmas,”
    muttering about food. No one was even looking for them anymore. They were alone on sixty-four mil ion square miles of ocean.
    A month earlier, twenty-six-year-old Zamperini had been one of the greatest runners in the world, expected by many to be the first to break the four-minute mile, one of the most celebrated barriers in sport. Now his Olympian’s body had wasted to less than one hundred pounds and his famous legs could no longer lift him. Almost everyone outside of his family had given him up for dead.
    On that morning of the twenty-seventh day, the men heard a distant, deep strumming. Every airman knew that sound: pistons. Their eyes caught a glint in the sky—a plane, high overhead. Zamperini fired two flares and shook powdered dye into the water, enveloping the rafts in a circle of vivid orange. The plane kept going, slowly disappearing. The men sagged. Then the sound returned, and the plane came back into view. The crew had seen them.
    With arms shrunken to little more than bone and yel owed skin, the castaways waved and shouted, their voices thin from thirst. The plane dropped low and swept alongside the rafts. Zamperini saw the profiles of the crewmen, dark against bright blueness.
    There was a terrific roaring sound. The water, and the rafts themselves, seemed to boil. It was machine gun fire. This was not an American rescue plane. It was a Japanese bomber.
    The men pitched themselves into the water and hung together under the rafts, cringing as bul ets punched through the rubber and
  • Johanna Ivanova de Mendozahas quoted9 years ago
    those experiences again,” he final y said, “I’d kil myself.”
  • Johanna Ivanova de Mendozahas quoted9 years ago
    When Louie finished, Trumbul asked him to summarize what he had endured. Louie stood silently.
    “If I knew I had to go through
  • Johanna Ivanova de Mendozahas quoted9 years ago
    what had ended the war. It meant we didn’t have to go hungry any longer, or go without medical treatment. I was so insensitive to anyone else’s human needs and suffering. I know it’s not right to say it was beautiful, because it real y wasn’t. But I believed the end probably justified the means.”
  • Johanna Ivanova de Mendozahas quoted9 years ago
    the rubble. The cheering died away. On Louie’s train, the silence came as they passed through Tokyo. A week after Louie had left Omori, sixteen square miles of Tokyo, and tens of thousands of souls, had been immolated by B-29s.
    A few of the trains slipped past Hiroshima. Virtual y every POW believed that the destruction of this city had saved them from execution. John Falconer, a survivor of the Bataan Death March, looked out as Hiroshima neared. “First there were trees,” he told historian Donald Knox. “Then the leaves were missing. As you got closer, branches were missing. Closer stil , the trunks were gone and then, as you got in the middle, there was nothing. Nothing! It was beautiful. I realized this was what had ended the war. It meant we didn’t have to go hungry any longer, or go without medical treatment. I was so insensitive to anyone else’s human needs and suffering. I know it’s not right to say it was beautiful, because it real y wasn’t. But I believed the end probably justified the means.”
    ——
    At seven that evening, the Naoetsu train entered bombed-out Yokohama and stopped at the station.
    “Welcome back, boys.”
    “Before me in immaculate khaki uniform and cap stood an American girl with a magazine-cover smile, faultless makeup and peroxide blonde hair,”
    wrote Tom Wade. “After three
  • Johanna Ivanova de Mendozahas quoted9 years ago
    From the top of Japan to the bottom, trains packed with POWs snaked toward Yokohama. Men pressed their faces to the windows to catch their first glimpse of what al of those B-29s had done. Once-grand cities were now flat, black stains, their only recognizable feature a gridwork of burned roads, passing nothing, leading nowhere.
    At the first sight of the destruction of their enemy, the POWs cheered. But after the first city there was another, then another, city after city razed, the survivors drifting about like specters, picking through
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