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Le destin incroyable de Louis Zamperini, coureur olympique et vétéran de la Seconde Guerre mondiale. Bientôt au cinéma !
Louis Zamperini est né en 1917 à New York. Quand il arrive en Californie, trois ans plus tard, il ne parle que l'italien. Dans un contexte de dépression économique, peu de perspectives d'avenir s'offrent à lui. C'est son inscription dans l'équipe scolaire de course de fond qui changera sa vie à tout jamais.
Il devient alors une gloire locale et participe aux jeux Olympiques de 1936. Mais sa chance tourne en 1941, lorsqu'il s'engage dans l'armée. Après un bombardement japonais, son avion s'abîme dans le Pacifique et il est fait prisonnier. Dans les camps de travail, il est soumis à des conditions de vie atroces mais surtout à un tortionnaire vicieux et sadique. En véritable force de la nature, il survit à toutes ces épreuves.
A son retour aux Etats-Unis, il est considéré par ses proches comme un héros. Toutefois, son traumatisme est tel qu'il plonge dans l'alcool et la violence. Sa rédemption vient alors de sa foi et de son premier amour : la course.
Ce livre témoigne du parcours prodigieux d'un champion pris dans la tourmente d'une période historique chaotique.
576 pages, Kindle Edition
First published November 16, 2010


"Dignity is as essential to human life as water, food, and oxygen. The stubborn retention of it, even in the face of extreme physical hardship, can hold a man's soul in his body long past the point at which the body should have surrendered it."
"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. In seeking the Bird's death to free himself, Louie had chained himself, once again, to his tyrant. During the war, the Bird had been unwilling to let go of Louie; after the war, Louie was unable to let go of the Bird."
"For these men, the central struggle of postwar life was to restore their dignity and find a way to see the world as something other than menacing blackness."
“A lifetime of glory is worth a moment of pain.”
"Stories of cannibalism among castaways were so common that British sailors considered the practice of choosing and sacrificing a victim to be an established "custom of the sea." To well-fed men on land, the idea of cannibalism has always inspired revulsion. To many sailors who have stood on the threshold of death, lost in the agony and mind-altering effects of starvation, it has seemed a reasonable, even inescapable solution."
“His conviction that everything happened for a reason, and would come to good, gave him laughing equanimity even in hard times.”

