Irene sniffled and sat up a little straighter. She awaited her many readers to come for the book signing. It happened to be on the anniversary of her rescue from the Aushwitz concentration camp. Not many people truly know what had happened to her. Unfortunely it is a nightmare she relives constantly. When she was reunited with her husband and children she cried for days at a time. Cries of fear of losing her family once again. She had found her old writing journal and the tears had ceased. Irene wrote for hours, writing everything down as to not risk her forgetful thoughts. She had gone through a dozen notebooks, at least, and chose one to be published. She wrote of a world without war, and the simple pleasures in life. An outbreak in the writing industry occurred as it was published. Thousands upon thousands of copies were sold all across the world. Irene was labeled as one of the most aspiring authors of the 20th century. That is what brought her to the little book shop in her hometown. Where hundreds of people lined up to talk to her about her work. She realized as she wiped her tears, that these were not tears of sadness or loss. She cried out of joy. Irene felt happy, which she had not truly felt in a very long…
I have recently finished the book "Fever 1789" by Laurie Halse Anderson. It was filled with a roller coaster of emotion leaving the reader on the edge before every chapter. The description in the book fills my mind of how it was back in the 1700's. This book demostrats a good understanding of the environment and tone in the book. At the end of the book it shows real life sections of how Anderson used history into a fictional story. The other book i'm reading is "Night" by Ellie Wiesel. It shows a similiar dark approach to the book's setting. The book is based off Ellie's life in a concentration camp during the Nazi regime. Ellie was only just a young boy and he had to endure painful suffering. Watching the people die around you and seeing your…
SETTING: The exposition begins in Lidice, Czechoslovakia at Milda’s home. Then it changes to Puschkau, Poland at a training camp to become perfect German citizens, then to Furstenberg, Germany where she lives then back to Lidice, Czechoslovakia where she finishes growing up.…
In the book its a story about a young girl named Hannah who hates to show up to her ewish holidays. She gets annoyed at how her family is always talking about the camps and the horror they had and she tries to ignore it because she thinks its so boring to hear about it. She tries to just not think about what they are saying but then again she had to because there was nothing else to do.…
Markus Zusak’s sanguine novel The Book Thief illustrates the austere story of a Jewish foster girl living amidst the cruelty and devastation of World War II. Liesel Meminger, an intelligent and kind-hearted youngster stricken by family tragedy, must contend with both physical and emotional conflict as she and her friends cope with the atrocities of life in Nazi Germany. In spite of the chaos encompassing their lives, Liesel and her allies manage to find peace and resilience through love and compassion.…
This novel captured my interest and held it to the final chapter! I not only learned about the history of World War II, but also of the emotional impact it had on soldiers and their families. The Gunderman family was a family devoted to each other. The realization that their oldest son, Jimmy, had to fight for his country was devastating to them. The main character, Earl, was the younger half-brother. He described himself as the weaker of the two. He and Jimmy were close and enjoyed being together. He vividly detailed the emotional struggles they went through as a family during the war and how they overcame the struggles together by trusting in each other.…
Life is full of searches; searches that heal the soul, and searches that tear it apart. In the book, All The Light We Cannot See by Anthony Doerr, Werner, a young, German boy of the age 13, lives in a Children’s House with his sister and other children who’s parents have deceased due to working in the mines. Werner is very smart for his age. His passion is radios. He goes house to house, working on radios of all kinds for people of all classes. Because of his education and knowledge, he has been accepted into an academy for Hitler Youth called the National Political Institute of Education #6. Marie-Laure LeBlanc is 12 when her and her father, a locksmith at the Paris Museum of Natural History, sojourn to Saint-Malo to get away from the bombings taking place in Paris. Marie-Laure went blind when she was six years old. At the time she lost her vision, her father had created a miniature of their neighborhood to guide her as she ventures around town. Within the pages of this book, I feel as though a locksmith searches for the key to protection and future for his blind daughter, Marie-Laure searches for meaning and understanding of the world around her, and Werner searches for a way to please his sister and himself as he Heils Hitler.…
It is sort of ironic how during that time period there were people living in peace and people living in turmoil. This diary only tells about her experience while she is hiding out, but it also gives reference to what is going on outside her family’s hide out. So from that point of view the reader can get the view of what the culture was like while Jewish people were hiding out and what is was like to be taken away and put in a concentration camp. Living in peace may mean how the German people are living because they do not have to face persecution from the government or it could mean how the Jewish that are living in hideouts are at peace because they have not been sent to a concentration camp yet. On the other hand living in turmoil can mean that the Jewish people are living fear of being caught and taken to a concentration camp and that the people that are already in the camps are already in turmoil.…
It takes place during World War II in various concentration camps throughout Germany and Poland. Told from the first person point of view of a survivor, the reader gains strong images of the pain and torture one had to endure during the Holocaust.…
In the captivating story of While We’re Far Apart by Lynn Austin, millions of people were affected by World War II, not unlike the real problems people had to deal with at this time: Jews were killed and persecuted in horrible ways and evidence of the war was everywhere. The main characters lived during this time period. One was a Jew whose entire family was either dead or missing in Hungary, one was a woman who hoped to get a second chance at love, and finally two were children whose father (that the woman was in love with) enlisted for the war.…
In the media now there is more bias then good information sharing. Many things that have come about are more bashing then informing. If we stand up and force more responsibility on those who publish this information it just might take a new spin for the better,…
Narrated by Death himself, this story is about a young girl that intrigued him. As World War Two is just starting, 9 year-old Liesel Meminger goes to live in Molching, Germany with her new foster family, the Hubermann's. The only item she takes with her is “The Gravedigger’s Handbook”, a book she had previously stolen from her brother’s graveside. While Liesel is settling into her new home Hans Hubermann teaches her to read, which makes her strive for more and more words. Soon enough Liesel is stealing books from the book burnings the Nazi’s put on, the Mayor's home, basically anywhere and everywhere she can find books with words.…
A horrifying story of a family during a time of death and war must find a way to stay together and survive one of the most horrific events in history. The novel night follows a fifteen-year-old boy who travels with his family to Auschwitz. Elie’s mother and sisters are sent to a death chamber meaning that Elie and his father are the only family they have left. Sadly, this is the tale of many Jewish families during World War II and the holocaust. While Elie is at Auschwitz he and the rest of the people at the concentration camp are put through a series of events that will change their lives forever. The Nazis have an evil system designed to dehumanize every Jewish person they can find. The book Night shows that the fastest way to dehumanize…
WARNING! If you want to read "The Extra" by Kathryn Lasky, the don't continue reading this this blog because I will be expose the characters personality. Thank you, come again. :) Lilo:…
0n September 1, 1939, Germany invades Poland and World War ll begins. It is at this time that the family moves in with the grandparents. It is here that Krystyna receives the green sweater knitted for her by her grandmother. They would be forcible taken and put into a ghetto with one room. Life in the ghetto would be very rough. People would starve on the streets. To say the ghettos were over-crowded was an understatement. Multiple families occupied a flat making it a tight squeeze but this was still a step above the people living on the street.…