Devil at My Heels: A Heroic Olympian's Astonishing Story of Survival as a Japanese POW in World War II

Louis Zamperini
4.36
3,801 ratings 395 reviews
The inspirational and extraordinarymemoir of one of the most courageous of the greatest generation, Louis Zamperini: Olympian, WWII Japanese POW and survivor. A juvenile delinquent, a world class NCAA miler, a 1936 Olympian, a WWII bombardier: Louis Zamperini had a fuller than most, when it changed in an instant. On May 27, 1943, his B–24 crashed into the Pacific Ocean. Louis and two other survivors found a raft amid the flaming wreckage and waited for rescue. Instead, they drifted two thousand miles for forty–seven days. Their only food: two shark livers and three raw albatross. Their only water: sporadic rainfall. Their only companions: hope and faith–and the ever–present sharks. On the forty–seventh day, mere skeletons close to death, Zamperini and pilot Russell Phillips spotted land–and were captured by the Japanese. Thus began more than two years of torture and humiliation as a prisoner of war. Zamperini was threatened with beheading, subject to medical experiments, routinely beaten, hidden in a secret interrogation facility, starved and forced into slave labour, and was the constant victim of a brutal prison guard nicknamed the Bird–a man so vicious that the other guards feared him and called him a psychopath. Meanwhile, the Army Air Corps declared Zamperini dead and President Roosevelt sends official condolences to his family, who never gave up hope that he was alive. Somehow, Zamperini survived and he returned home a hero. The celebration was short–lived. He plunged into drinking and brawling and the depths of rage and despair. Nightly, the Bird's face leered at him in his dreams. It would take years, but with the love of his wife and the power of faith, he was able to stop the nightmares and the drinking. A stirring memoir from one of the greatest of the "Greatest Generation," DEVIL AT MY HEELS is a living document about the brutality of war, the tenacity of the human spirit, and the power of forgiveness.
Genres: NonfictionHistoryBiographyMemoirWarWorld War IIAutobiographyMilitary FictionHistoricalChristian
304 Pages

Community Reviews:

5 star
2079 (55%)
4 star
1184 (31%)
3 star
409 (11%)
2 star
85 (2%)
1 star
44 (1%)

Readers also enjoyed

Other books by Louis Zamperini

Lists with this book

Unbroken: A World War II Story of Survival, Resilience and Redemption
Escape From Davao: The Forgotten Story of the Most Daring Prison Break of the Pacific War
With the Old Breed: At Peleliu and Okinawa
World War II in the Pacific
163 books • 153 voters
To Kill a Mockingbird
Pride and Prejudice
The Diary of a Young Girl
Books That Everyone Should Read At Least Once
30950 books • 116601 voters
Manhood in the Making: Cultural Concepts of Masculinity
The Circle
Science, Strategy and War
The Boys in the Boat: Nine Americans and Their Epic Quest for Gold at the 1936 Berlin Olympics
Rome 1960: The Olympics That Changed the World
Boycott: Stolen Dreams of the 1980 Moscow Olympic Games
The Olympic Games
266 books • 126 voters