I'd already read Unbroken so I thought Louie's considerably slimmer autobiography probably wouldn't tell me anything I didn't already know, but decided to read it anyway because I love the story and wanted to hear it in Louie's own words. I'm so glad I did. I wouldn't recommend one book over the other; they are amazing in different ways and I'd hand both to anyone. Laura Hillenbrand is technically the better writer (she's better than most writers I've ever read) and she's more exhaustive in her research at every turn, but Louie is more detailed when digging through the darkness of his own heart. And, as I'd expected, there's just nothing like hearing it from the man himself--definitely one of the people I'm most looking forward to meeting in heaven. His account is short, punchy, honest, and peppered with wisdom he picked up throughout his astonishing life. Some favorites:
"People say all anyone needs is a positive attitude. It's nice to have, but a positive attitude has nothing to do with winning. I often had a defeatist attitude before a race. What matters is what you do to your body. Self esteem can't win you a race if you're not in shape."
"The most frightening experience in life is going down in a plane."
"What happens is up to God."
"On life rafts, that's what you mostly do: you pray."
"I made myself a promise: no matter what lay ahead, I'd never think about dying, only about living."
"Rescue would be nice, but survival was most important."
"To live, a man needs food, water, and a sharp mind."
"The mind is a crucial line of defense against adversity."
"Hope is incomplete and ongoing. Faith is the substance of things hoped for and is complete."
"What I feared most was that my generation would teach the hatred and resentment I was learning at the hands of the Japanese to our own children and the cycle of disaffection and violence would never stop."
"I knew in my heart that the war--this war--was right."
"All I knew was that hate was as deadly as any poison."
"When there's no further hope, men always look up."
"Boxed in, pushed out, whatever the pace, but I'm in the race.... A race for life. My life." (on his conversion)
"The great commandment is that we preach the gospel to every creature, but neither God nor the Bible says anything about forcing it down people's throats."
"I longed to look into [my captors'] eyes and say not only 'I forgive you,' but to tell them of the greatest event of forgiveness the world has ever known when Christ on the Cross, and at the peak of his agony, could say of his executioners, 'Forgive them, Father, for they know not what they do.'"
"My whole life is serving God."
"You should make your life count right up to the last minute."