Unbroken by Laura Hillenbrand is an astonishing story that starts off with Louie Zamperini, an Olympian who bravely fights in World War II, when his plane crashes into the ocean and miraculously survives with 2 other people. When all hope was lost, they spotted land and paddled towards it. As they went closer, it turned out to be a Japanese ship. They were taken to a POW (Prisoners of War) camp and suffered tremendously by the hand of a man nicknamed “The Bird” and only survived by the grace of God. When the war was over and Louie went home, he suffered Post Traumatic Stress and flashbacks. He “resolved” it with drinking but sobered up when he found God. After that, he dedicated the rest of his life to God and helping others. Louie, the one who fought in the war, was starved, and beaten, was the one who outlived everyone, dieing in 2014 at the age of 97. His life was truly a miracle. …show more content…
In the beginning, he had a very athletic body, because he did nothing else but run and train for the Olympics. Rumor had it that his legs were insured for $50,000! He was 5ft 9 and had brown hair. When he went into the military and survived the crash, because of the lack of food, he was a rack of bones. When he was placed in POW camps, his physical strength took a drastic dive. When the men were rescued, they were “ghastly thin’ and “walking skeletons”. When he got home, he started to gain weight rapidly but it was mostly retained
He was small physically, yet strong and active.” His father died when he was 19, and that played a big role in the reason why he joined the war.
Author, Laura Hillenbrand was quoted for, “Without dignity, identity is erased” (Hillenbrand 189). Louie Zamperini, olympic runner and WWII hero, went through the stripping of his identity and survived to tell the tale. The novel Unbroken, by Laura Hillenbrand, is the story of Zamperini’s life, of his running adventures to fighting for survival during WWII, and returning home an unfamiliar man. Suffering through imprisonment has left Zamperini with a loss of identity, which was countered with a faith in God.
Unbroken is an exhilarating book. The journey continues with Louie Zamperini, an Olympic track athlete and soldier in the air force. Where he goes into battle and is as scared as a toddler on Halloween night. ☺ Louie’s plane went down. Louie and his friend, Captain Russell Allen Phillips survived on the raft for 47 days before getting captured by the Japanese.
The book being reviewed is Unbroken An Olympian’s Journey from Airman to Captain to Captive is a memoir written by Laura Hillenbrand(2014). The book is about an Italian immigrant who moved to the United States named Louie Zamperini where he got drafted into the Air Force, crashed in a search and rescue mission, stranded in the ocean, was tortured in the Japanese in a Prisoner of war camp. When the war was finally overOlympicsand he got rescued along with all the people at the POW camp, he had to return to a normal lifestyle in the United States. I chose this book because I wanted to read about the experience that Louie went through during the time he was a POW.
Louie Zamperini and Mutsuhiro “The Bird” Watanabe: Character Comparison Like snowflakes, all people are extremely unique. Therefore, it can be assumed that we all have a different outlook on the world and will handle what the universe throws at us in our own way. In the young adult novel, Unbroken, Laura Hillenbrand conveys this theme, war and trauma can have profound and varied effects on different people experiencing it in a similar way. She does this by showing the reader extremes at opposite ends of the spectrum: Louie Zamperini and Mutsuhiro Watanabe.
Unbroken Laura Hillenbrand, the author of Unbroken, wrote the book about Louis Zamperini’s fight to survive though tortured, beaten, and a barrage of gunfire. After surviving a plane crash in the middle of the ocean, where he spent forty-seven days slowly dying of intense hunger and thirst, the book shows Louis Zamperini’s quick wit and will to survive despite being tormented as a Japanese POW (prisoner of war). The author uses rhetorical devices such as syntax, diction, imagery, and tone to amplify certain moments, Hillenbrand uses imagery to convey the scene and appeal to the reader’s senses and uses precise diction to elaborate on certain scenarios. She uses tone to convey the characters’ attitudes and to give the feel of certain moment.
“ … but I need it!” “Need” is such a common word used by the population living in the United States. Need is exhausted — used hundreds of times daily by people like you and I. “I need that shirt, that ice cream, that car…,” recently, this summer, I realized that want is not parallel to need. I peaked through an unfamiliar paradigm where basic vocabulary cannot relate the intangible emotions of the characters that we dissected.
Unit Two: Novel Study NOVEL: Out of My Mind by Sharon M. Draper YOUR NAME: Alex Cervera Arriaga HOMEROOM: 6BW Main Character List Make a note of each significant character you come across as you read. Provide a brief description of them in order to make sure they are memorable.
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.
World War II was a time that required resilient, courageous, optimistic people to serve in the military. Louie Zamperini, the main character of Laura Hillenbrand’s novel, Unbroken, was just that. Louie Zamperini grew up a rebellious, misbehaving child. When he grew up, he enlisted in the U.S. Air Force. He got into a plane crash in the middle of the Pacific Ocean, between Hawaii and Japan.
The Hidden Meaning Nikos Kazantzakis says, “Everything in the world has a hidden meaning” and this can certainly apply to the novel Vaclav & Lena, by Haley Tanner. In the novel, one of the protagonists named Vaclav has a passion for magic and Lena is his assistant. They perform tricks for Vaclav’s parents because Lena doesn’t have any parents. One of their magic tricks is the disappearing coin trick, where Vaclav borrows a coin from his father and makes it magically disappear gaining praise from Rasia, his mother, even though his actions reveal where it went. Then, when Vaclav finds the truth behind Lena’s parents from her aunt, he doesn’t want her to hear it and decides to make up his version of it.
The Revealing Star Whether we think about it or not, symbols are very much a part of our life. To each individual, stars symbolize a certain kind of meaning. For Margaret the star symbol appears to create a range of associations beyond itself. The star symbolizes Margaret’s slow growing tumor, her china collection, and her guilt and shame. In Broken for you, by Stephanie Kallos, the symbol of the star reveals Margaret to be a different person than she used to be.
Although he faced many hardships throughout the course of his life, Louie managed to stay strong and continue on to spread his heroic life story of survival, resilience, and
“Two Kinds,” by Amy Tan, essentially revolves around the struggle of Jing Mei and her constant conflict with her mother. Throughout her life, she is forced into living a life that is not hers, but rather her mom’s vision of a perfect child; because her mother lost everything, which included her parents and kids, so her only hope was through Jing Mei. Jing Mei’s mom watches TV shows such as the Ed Sullivan Show, which gives her inspiration that her daughter should be like the people and actors. First her mom saw how on the television a three-year-old boy can name all the capitals of the states and foreign countries and would even pronounce it correctly. Her mom would quiz Jing Mei on capitals of certain places, only to discover that
Nowshin Nawal CWL 202 As she walked into the living room, Ava wondered if she should wave hi to the guy, who seemed absolutely shy and uncomfortable sitting on her parents brown rusty couch, surrounded by a room full of people that included Ava’s parents, cousins, and the guy’s family, but soon reconsidered thinking what the elders would think if she seemed too interested in a guy she barely knew or ever spoken to before, so she just shook hands with the guy’s sister and made a small talk with his mom, who was awfully gorgeous for her age, which could be 45 or 50, and was covered with so much gold jewels that made Ava question how the families had become acquaintances, which they barely were, as Ava has seen this family only twice before