Unbroken: A World War II Story of Survival, Resilience, and Redemption
by Laura Hillenbrand
Published: November 16, 2010
Genres: Biography, Non-fiction, World War II
Format: eBook (473 pages)
Source: Purchased
On a May afternoon in 1943, an Army Air Forces bomber crashed into the Pacific Ocean and disappeared, leaving only a spray of debris and a slick of oil, gasoline, and blood. Then, on the ocean surface, a face appeared. It was that of a young lieutenant, the plane’s bombardier, who was struggling to a life raft and pulling himself aboard. So began one of the most extraordinary odysseys of the Second World War.
In her long-awaited new book, Laura Hillenbrand writes with the same rich and vivid narrative voice she displayed inSeabiscuit. Telling an unforgettable story of a man’s journey into extremity,Unbrokenis a testament to the resilience of the human mind, body, and spirit.
Laura Hillenbrand knows how to write a non-fiction memoir that is just as compelling as the best fiction out there. Skip the movie and read Unbroken. This amazing memoir isabout the Pacific front of World War II against Japan that most people don’t know very much about.
Jessica Thinks Too Much Version
Mild spoilers ahead! This spoiler warning is for those very sensitive to any spoilers.Major spoilers look like this >View Spoiler »
Apparently I have this idea in my head that memoirs are written about perfect people who were born with more strength than the rest of us losers. Maybe that’s true of other memoirs, but it wasn’t true of Unbroken. This memoir doesn’t idolize him.
Unbroken was upfront and honest about Louie’s faults, especially about him being a troublemaker as a child. His older brother Pete saw potential in him. Instead of seeing a troublemaker, Pete saw a competitive boy who wanted attention. It was a reminder to me to look for the good in my kids. This morning my oldest son was bossing around his younger brother. Instead of reminding him (again) that he’s not in charge of his brother, I saw a young boy who wanted more responsibility. Sometimes all it takes is seeing your weaknesses as strengths. When Louie starts to see that the “bad” qualities he had as a child could help him survive, I was touched.
From earliest childhood, Louie had regarded every limitation placed on him as a challenge to his wits, his resourcefulness, and his determination to rebel. The result had been a mutinous youth. As maddening as his exploits had been for his parents and his town, Louie’s success in carrying them off had given him the conviction that he could think his way around any boundary. Now, as he was cast into extremity, despair and death became the focus of his defiance. The same attributes that had made him the boy terror of Torrance were keeping him alive in the greatest struggle of his life.
-Laura Hillenbrand, Unbroken: A World War II Story of Survival, Resilience, and Redemption (p. 148).
I was floored by how many things Louie survives. Just one of his life events would be enough to turn into an inspiring memoir. Louie survived a plane crash, was lost at sea and almost starved to death (they had food but one guy ate it all), were attacked by sharks while repairing their rubber raft that had holes in it because they were shot at by enemy planes, was a soldier in World War II, and became a prisoner of war with concentration camp conditions in Japan.
When Louie and some of the men at the POW camp weretrying to escape, the plan involvedgoing across the sea in a small motor boat. Louie didn’tsee that as a problem at all compared to drifting 2000 miles in the open ocean with no food. If nothing else, it reminded me that trials can help you say “I’ve had worse.”
I was surprised how long the story went on after Louie came home from the POW camp. It didn’t paint this happily ever after picture. It talked realistically about the physical and emotional scars that Louie and other POW prisoners had the rest of their lives. Louie was rescued physically but the story continued until he was free emotionally as well.
When Laura Hillenbrand first interviewed Louie about his story, the thing that drove her to write this book was to find out how someone could forgive such horrific abuse. Forgiveness is what Unbroken is about. And that’s why the movie sucks because it skims over the forgiveness part of the story. Oh and the fact that the climax in the movie is anti-climatic because even though Louie holds that beam over his head forever the guards beat him with a stick anyway (which does not happen in the book). LET HIM WIN OH MY GOSH. But that’s another post.
The reason Laura Hillenbrand writes such compelling non-fiction is because she knows what NOT to put into her book. I can tell that Laura’s research could easily be thousands of pages long and she has a gift for knowing what to leave out. (This is a gift I need. I feel the need to put every single thought in my book reviews.)
Laura’s selectiveness shines the most for me in her characterization. She gives you one characteristic about each character that is easy to remember and then doesn’t info dump all the other details about the character. It made it so I could say “Oh that’s the guy with the girlfriend at home.” Of course there’s more to the characters than that. As we got to know them through the book, I could attach the new things I learned to that one interesting characteristic so I could keep them all straight.
Another thing that Laura Hillenbrand is beyond talented at is giving the reader a sense of the time period. I loved how she tied all the famous events of the time together with the flight of the Zeppelin. Unbroken helped me learn history by seeing how the world and times affected one person. Laura describes her own writing process better than I could.
You can’t truly understand an individual unless you understand the world he or she inhabits, and in illustrating that individual’s world, you will, hopefully, capture history in the accessible, tactile, authentic way in which the times were actually experienced. In Unbroken as in Seabiscuit, I tried to paint portraits not just of individuals, but of their times.
-Laura Hillenbrand, Unbroken: A World War II Story of Survival, Resilience, and Redemption (Reading Guide)
It wasn’t until reading Unbroken that I realized non-fiction can do something amazing that fiction can’t. Non-fiction can tell you details that people inside the story don’t know. This doesn’t work in fiction because we think the characters are dumb if they don’t know things that we do. But it totally worked in Unbroken because they weren’t dumb – they just couldn’t see everything like we can from this vantage point of looking at these events as the past.
I never realized how little I knew about the Pacific side of World War II until Laura Hillenbrand pointed it out in the interview at the end of the book.
I’m troubled by the fact that when World War II is taught in schools, the lessons focus almost entirely on the European war.
-Laura Hillenbrand, Unbroken: A World War II Story of Survival, Resilience, and Redemption (Reading Guide)
Do you agree with the author’s statement that in the US people hardly learn anything about the pacific side of the war?
I totally agree. I’m so grateful that Laura wrote this book to help me understand the events surrounding that side of WWII. All I remember learning in school was that the US dropped the atomic bomb and the war was over. The saying about winning the war in the Pacific “one damned island after another (page 65)” made me see how hopeless the war must have been. I was shocked at the statistics that more people died in airplane accidents than in actual combat. I’m so glad that I learned in such a fascinating way about this important time in history.
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About Laura Hillenbrand
Laura Hillenbrand (born 1967) is the author of the acclaimed Seabiscuit: An American Legend, a non-fiction account of the career of the great racehorse Seabiscuit, for which she won the William Hill Sports Book of the Year in 2001. The book later became the basis of the 2003 movie Seabiscuit. Her essays have appeared in The New Yorker, Equus magazine, American Heritage, The Blood-Horse, Thoroughbred Times, The Backstretch, Turf and Sport Digest, and many other publications. Her 1998 American Heritage article on the horse Seabiscuit won the Eclipse Award for Magazine Writing.
Born in Fairfax, Virginia, Hillenbrand studied at Kenyon College in Gambier, Ohio, but was forced to leave before graduation when she contracted chronic fatigue syndrome, which she has struggled with ever since. She now lives in Washington, D.C.
Reading this book contributed to these challenges:
- eBook Challenge 2015
- TBR Pile 2015