Wednesday, December 2, 2015

The Book Thief


Title: The Book Thief
Author: Markus Zusak
Publisher: Alfred A. Knopf: New York, 2005
ISBN: 978-0375842207 

Summary: Liesel Meminger, age 9, has already stolen her first book by the time she arrives at her foster home outside Munich in 1939 Nazi Germany. She took it from the cemetery where they buried her younger brother on the way to what was supposed to be their new home. Liesel can’t read yet, but when her nightmares about her brother’s death cause her to cry out, her accordion-playing foster father sits with her throughout the night, reading her stolen book aloud to calm her. She slowly learns to read, but books are rare in poverty-stricken Germany, leading her to steal again, this time from a bonfire in honor of the Fuher’s birthday. As Liesel grows she steals more books, helps hide a Jew in the basement, falls in love, and comes full circle by reading aloud in the neighborhood bomb shelter during air raids, calming the living nightmares of those around her.

Critical Analysis: The Book Thief seems like it should be a historic fiction novel, but there’s a twist, Death is the omniscient narrator and his presence as a character places this novel in the low fantasy genre. He is the best character of the novel—witty, descriptive to the point of poetic, and complex. He is fond of putting bold snippets of facts, descriptions, and spoilers centered on the page, just to make sure you see them. Somehow little Liesel captures his attention and he keeps an eye on her whenever he has the opportunity. However, he’s particularly busy collecting souls from the mass carnage that is World War II, so we witness only episodes of her life as she grows to be a teenager. As a narrator Death attempts to be dispassionate, but he never quite manages to be so. 

Liesel is likeable enough, but because of Death’s studied detachment, you never get to really know her. We do know how Death feels about her, his admiration primarily, but also his empathy toward her trials and his sadness about what she still must face. In fact, that is how Death looks at almost all the characters in the novel—whether it’s the incorrigible boy next door, Rudy, Liesel’s foster mother and father, the Hubermann’s, the Jew they hide in the basement, Max, and even the neighbor who regularly spits on the Hubermann’s door. Oddly enough, Death’s vivid descriptions are what makes the characters live. 

Although the subject matter of life touched by war is complex, the plot is not. The conclusion is satisfying and realistic. 

What I found to be most refreshing is Zusak’s treatment of the German people and his clear separation between Germans and the Nazi’s. He allows us to feel sympathy for the German people after decades of studying WWII and falsely classifying Germans and Nazis as one and the same. 

Awards:
 
ALA Notable Book
National Jewish Book Award
Michael L. Printz Honor Book
New York Times #1 Best Seller
Quill Award Nominee

Reviews: 

School Library Journal: “Zusak not only creates a mesmerizing and original story but also writes with poetic syntax…An extraordinary narrative.” 

USA Today: “The Book Thief is unsettling and unsentimental, yet ultimately poetic.” 

New York Times: “Brilliant and hugely ambitious…The hope we see in Liesel is unassailable, the kind you can hang on to in the midst of poverty and war and violence.”
 

More Great Books About World War II:
Hitler Youth: Growing Up in Hitler’s Shadow by Susan Baroletti
The Hiding Place by Corrie Ten Boom
Number the Stars by Lois Lowry
The Boy in the Striped Pajamas by John Boyne
The Diary of a Young Girl by Anne Frank

The Book Thief has been made into a major motion picture. Here are some other movies you may enjoy.
Life is Beautiful. Lionsgate, 1998. PG-13. Directed by and Starring Roberto Benigni. Italian with English Subtitles.
The Boy in the Striped Pajamas. Miramax Lionsgate, 2008. PG-13 Directed by Mark Herman. Starring Asa Butterfield and David Thewlis
Empire of the Sun. Amblin Entertainment, Warner Bros. 1987. PG. Directed by Steven Spielberg. Starring Christian Bale
Questions to Ponder:
What was the first book you remember reading?
Liesel regularly breaks into the mayor’s house in order to steal books. What lengths would you go to in order to read?

Created for Texas Woman’s University course LS 5603.21

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