Unbroken The Sequel In the sequel of Unbroken, the author sees Louie Zamperini in his later years, and Louie now owns a camp in California’s San Gabriel Mountains known as the Victory. He waits for boys that are intimately familiar with juvenile hall and what jail is like. Louie’s camp lets these kind of people have them figure out their problems and to make them a better person, and to believe in themselves, and also to be free without any walls around them. When Louie isn 't with his campers, he would be traveling around the world telling his story to audiences in everything from grade school classrooms to stadiums. He was very particularly fond of speaking on cruise ships, sorting through invitations to find a plum voyage, kicking back on the first-class deck with a cool drink in hand, and reveling in the ocean. Louie, being concerned that accepting fat honoraria would discourage schools and small groups from asking him to speak, declined anything over modest fees. He made just enough money to keep Cissy and her little brother, Luke-in diapers, then later in blue jeans, and finally college. Over the years, Louie received an absurd number of awards and honors. For example, the Lomita Flight Strip, which had been renamed Louie Zamperini Field while Louie was languishing in Naoetsu, was rededicated to him not once more, but twice. Louie was also chosen to carry the Olympic torch before five different olympic games. So many groups would clamor to give Louie awards, he
Louie Zamperini. He was a legend if you ask me. Not many people know who it is. Louise and Parini was an Olympic runner who is also fought in World War II. Louie Was captured by Japan to become a prisoner of war where he would be put through the most gruesome, brutal months of his life.
In the beginning of his story, Louie constantly stole
By doing this, he made wise decisions protecting him from being tortured and interrogated by the camp officials. Finally after two years of living in POW camps, Louie’s misery was over. He arrived home to his family and he was ecstatic: “This, this little home,” he said, “was worth all of it” (341). Louie’s arrival spread excitement throughout his household and town.
Hillenbrand showed that Louie was not only determined to run in the Olympics but to survive through later tragedies in his lifetime. A rebellious thief who stole from others at
Louie Zamperini was an Olympic runner who became an Air Force airman once World War II started and was stranded for forty-seven days battling sharks, typhoons, and enemy gunfire in the Pacific Ocean after his plane crashed. Once he was captured by the Japanese, for two year he was beaten, starved, and humiliated by a guard named Mutsuhiro Watanabe, the Bird, at certain POW camps. There was also his life after he returned home where he encountered being haunted in his dreams by the Bird as well as having to make sense of his life after everything he had to encounter during the time of war. Even though the book was about Louie and his life, there were also other war heroes such as the POWs who sacrificed their lives and had to battle post traumatic shock because of the things they went through during their
Imagine being stuck in a cage, getting poked at by sticks, starved, beaten, and humiliated. Finally, getting stripped of the last thing you have: your dignity. Hillenbrand states, “Without dignity, identity is erased.” Unbroken is about a stubborn young Louie Zamberini, determined not to break under pressure. In the later part of Hillenbrand’s novel, Louie is captured by the Japanese and lives for over two years in hellish prisoner camps.
Louie Zamperini went through more pain and suffering than most people will ever endure in their entire life. In the book Unbroken by Laura Hillenbrand, Louis Zamperini was an Olympic runner. He was drafted during World War II . During the war, his plane crashed in the middle of the ocean and he was stranded with little resources to survive. This book follows his incredible story battling starvation and abuse in Prisoner of War camps (POW).
He moved on from high school and set his eyes on the 1936 Berlin Olympics. Louie “lived and breathed the 1,500 meters and Berlin. ”(22) Louie couldn’t get into what he could do best which was the 1,500 meters because “he couldn’t force his body to improve quickly enough to catch his older rivals by summer. He was heartbroken.
Unbroken is the best word that can be used to describe Louie Zamperini. In the book Unbroken, by Laura Hillenbrand, there are three other adjectives that can be used to describe Louie Zamperini, the main character. These adjectives are determined, compassionate, and defiant. These attributes can be proven through not only Louie’s actions, but his thoughts as well. These are the three different characteristics of Louie.
When World War II started, he stopped his running career to join the army. He was very courageous to leave his family, his friends, and his running behind to serve in the military. Louis has survived many war battles and was good at doing it, so they called him back on another tour, but this time a tragedy happened. Louie's plane crashed and never made it to war. He survived because he landed in the middle of the Pacific Ocean stranded with just a raft.
When most POWs lost hope he managed to keep going while he was starved, beaten, and stuck in horrible conditions. The one experience that kept hope with Louie was the Olympics. He obviously had an amazing time. When Laura was talking about Louie’s Olympic participation she recounted how he was celebrated in Torrance, and how he ate his largest meal going to Berlin. She didn’t have to include these parts, however they are used to highlight how amazing it was.
Shortly after being captured, Zamperini is taken to a POW camp where he is abused physically and mentally. Throughout the novel the readers learn that the hardships of war effect Louie, causing the loss of his dignity. After Louie was captured by the Japanese, he was taken to a POW camp ,Ofuna, they began to deprive Louie of human essentials such as food and water. To make matters worse, they started to conduct experiments on him and his comrade Phil, “The doctor pushed more solution into his vein, and the spinning worsened.
This causes the Olympics to be suspended. Louie becomes depressed because he is not sure what to do with his life now, so he enlists in the Army Air Corps in 1941. While in his military training, Louie becomes a very skilled bombardier. Louie changes his focus from running, to serving in the Army.
War Combat, loyalty, enmity, bloodshed, and duty, all words that fit under the category of war. The novel Unbroken by Laura Hillenbrand is about Louis Zamperini a strong willed man raised in Torrance, California. He started as a young troublemaker until he discovered his passion for running in high school. That very passion led him to compete in the Olympics. Later he enlisted in the Army Air Corps, a brave decision that would change his life.
The three-time United States Track and Field Olympic champion, Gail Devers once said, “Sometimes we fall, sometimes we stumble, but we can’t stay down. We can’t allow life to beat us down. Everything happens for a reason, and it builds character in us, and it tells us what we are about and how strong we really are when we didn’t think we could be that strong.” In the non-fiction book Unbroken, by Laura Hillenbrand, protagonist Louis Zamperini demonstrates his everlasting perseverance through his everyday actions. Like Devers believed, the resilient Zamperini refused to be defeated or demoralized and did everything in his power to keep his feet on the ground and his chin up.