Unbroken Laura Hillenbrand Analysis

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Pages: 3

“We meet again.” (pg191) Words spoken by a pretentious man. A man who was thought to be a former friend. These words would be the first revealing side of a man that was once thought to be so innocent, so unexpectedly different. Kunichi James Sasaki was not the person that Louie Zimperini remembered from his college days. The biography Unbroken by Laura Hillenbrand tells the story of Louie Zimperini and his struggles to survive. While attending the University of Southern California, Louie met Kunichi James Sasaki, known as Jimmie. Their shared interests in music and sports lead to a casual friendship. Louie and his other friends viewed Jimmie as an intelligent, competent student who they assumed had received degrees from Harvard, Princeton, and Yale. In reality Jimmie wore a façade, “Neither Louie nor anyone else knew that Jimmie’s attempts to pass as a student were apparently an elaborate ruse. (pg40)” He had never attended any other college and was not even a student at USC, “Though he spent a lot of time on campus and led everyone to …show more content…
When Louie goes to Ofuna prisoner of war camp he is surprised to see Sasaki once again, but this time he is no longer a friend. For the first time Louie sees Jimmies for what he is, an enemy spy. As Sasaki continues to return into Louie’s life he begins to play a bigger role on the mental satiability of Louie, “Jimmie Sasaki made frequent visits to Ofuna, and he liked to call Louie to his office. (pg202) Sasaki plays a role in Louie’s life and story in a way that it connects to the overall effect of spies in the war. With the destruction of trust and loyalty spies created a questioning confusion that hurt America. The Japanese had infiltrated the United States and were attaching form the inside of the country. This created a huge internal conflict within the country that would cause the war to become even more