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| The Book Thief |
Synopsis: Death narrates the story of Liesel Meminger, a nine-year-old girl living with a foster family in Nazi Germany. This is her story, the story of her family and Max, the Jewish man who they hide in their basement, the other inhabitants of the street in which they live and of the books that Liesel steals to satisfy her cravings for words.
Review: Death narrates this story of Liesel Meminger. He first meets her when she is nine, travelling on a train with her brother to a foster family. Death is there because her brother dies on the journey and he sees Liesel take the first of the books she will steal. Death describes her life with her foster father, Hans Huberman, a gentle, kind man who teaches Liesel to read. He describes episodes in Liesel’s life – her realisation that she is fostered because her parents were communists and the upheaval caused by the entry of Max Vandenburg into the lives of the Hubermans. For Max is Jewish, and the Hubermans agree to hide him out of loyalty to an old friend and because the Hubermans are decent, kind people who have not lost their humanity, although they live in terrible times. The reader sees Liesel realise the importance of words, she steals more books and has books given to her that Max has manufactured from pages of “Mein Kampf”, written and illustrated by himself. The reader is left in no doubt by Death, of the importance of words to humanity.
One of the strengths of the book is that it deals with ordinary German people living under Fascism. It makes it clear that it is not easy for ordinary people to resist when living under the conditions that existed in Nazi Germany and how these conditions lead to the dehumanisation of people. However, it makes clear that people could and did resist and that humanity can flourish under the most horrendous of situations
This is an extremely moving book. Death is never sentimental, just interested and practical about the job that he does and the people that he meets. We see events and people through his eyes – people like Hans Huberman, who preserves his humanity and remains a hero, though he tries to become a member of the Nazi Party and never fires a shot. The publishers are issuing the book in both children and adult editions. Whether this is really a children’s book is up for debate. It can certainly be read by young adults, but whether there is a need for a separate children’s edition is difficult to tell. Is it for children? Not as a matter of course, but if they are interested. It will not be easy and it will lead to questions. But that is as it should be.
Buy this Book2006-12-20
| Listing Information | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Author: | Markus Zusak | |||
| Illustrator: | Trudy White | |||
| Genre: | History | |||
| Age Range (see age categories): | 14 - 16 years, 16+ years | |||
| Curriculum Subject: | Nazi Germany, Second World War | |||
| Theme/Subject: | Second World War, WWII, Holocaust, Books, bombing, stealing, survival, death | |||
| Publisher: | Bodley Head | |||
| ISBN: | 9780-370329215 | |||
| Reviewer: | Jane Rosen | |||
| Title: | The Book Thief | |||
| Hits: | 1344 | |||
| Added: | 2006-12-20 16:48:11 | |||
| Last updated: | 2007-08-27 18:38:56 | |||
Reviewed by Pinkfairy, 2007-12-24 When Death tells a story, you really have to listen.
This is the front cover blurb to the most moving and intelligent book that I have read for a very long time. Historically accurate, intelligently written, moving, clever, tear-jerking and compelling I would highly recommend this as a must read for anyone over the age of 16. For those studying modern history, particularly the Holocaust and World War 2 this is a must read for its sense of realism. Being narrated by a character who is at once an intimate part of the story and very separate from it actually draws the reader further in to this world of childhood innocence and the horrors of war. Narrated by an adult yet told from the point of view of an 11 year old girl Zusak has captured the innocence of childhood on the cusp of a greater understanding of the adult world.
Liesel Meminger’s life is about to change irrevocably. Is is because she steals a copy of the Grave Digger’s handbook despite her inability to read? Is it the untimely death of her brother? being adopted away from her mother? Her foster father? Her first, innocent love Rudy or even Max? It is in fact aa mix of all these elements which conspire together to change the life of Liesel Meminger forever.
Nazi Germany, 1939 and Death is busy but he is about to get even busier than he could have ever imagined, how does he cope with all the souls that he must carry over the next few years, well he tries to distance himself from the role as much as possible and as a result he follows with interest the life of Liesel whose brother was taken away from her. The girl who stole a book, learnt to read and begins a love affair with books and words is the one positive element in the lives of many of those around her. She inspires; she captures the innocence of youth whilst portraying maturity beyond her years. Her story and the story of Death, as he narrates them, through the harsh years of Nazi Germany and a world war are a story about the power of words and the way in which books can nourish the soul.
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