The Book Thief by Markus Zusak | Book Review
There are many reasons why a book is special, for me the
book has to have a way of making you see things in a way you have never even
thought of before. Whether it is spiritually, intellectually, or mentally.
The Book Thief by
Markus Zusak hit the nail on mentally.
The last book that made me pause, and thoroughly think,
“What am I doing with my life” was If I Stay by Gayle Foreman.
In this story we explore World War II Germany, and through
Death’s eyes we watch a young girl by the name of Liesel Meminger, a foster
child living in the poor neighborhood in Munich.
Liesel is the famous book thief that caught Death’s eye
while he collected the souls of the fallen. He first met her when he collected
the soul of her younger brother and caught her in the act of stealing her first
book The Grave Digger’s Handbook.
I have never read a book where I can say that the narrator
is completely reliable. He has no real attachments to this girl. He is Death;
he has few emotions towards humans but even so he still feels for them. He
feels: curiosity, pity, happiness and sadness. The most un-human character was
the most human. (Does that make sense?) He has human-like emotions, but he is
not allowed to be part of humanity.
Death was blunt with all the characters in story and even forewarned
that they were all going to die. He also forewarned us of all the major events
that were going to happen and gave us as readers’ small glimpses of how it was
going to occur.
There was some
foreshadowing, by the first couple chapters you are already aware of the
characters who will die by the end and it was heart breaking because you end up
growing attached to a few them.
It was the worst feeling in the world watching yourself fall
in love with a character knowing that he or she was not going to survive the
story.
But I guess that was why The
Book Thief was so special, you were Death, and you watched people live
their daily lives unaware that you were aware that it was going to be over
soon.
Liesel, Max, Rudy, Papa, Mama, Tommy. All these characters
made it into my heart and watching most of them die was a painful experience.
I do not wish to give much of the story away, because The Book Thief is a piece of literature
that everyone should read, much like 1984.
It is a story that will survive the test of time, because it
creates awareness in the reader that life is unexpected and you never know when
it will end. It can end in your sleep, like for most citizens of Himmel Street,
or on your journey to someplace new. It can all end unexpectedly, not only your
life but also the lives of people who you hold dear, it can end, and it may end
filled with regrets.
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