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Book Analysis: All The Light We Cannot See

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Book Analysis: All The Light We Cannot See
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. Since the day his daughter …show more content…
In this case, a locksmith is searching for a life of success and protection for his blind daughter, Marie-Laure searches to see the world by feel, and Werner searches for a way to please his sister and himself as he enters an academy for Hitler Youth. Because of the way the story is going, I strongly believe Marie-Laure will be safe and successful with her disability and she will do great things as she feels the world around her. However, I am excited to see what Werner chooses; the mines that lead to possible death, or the academy, which leads to wrongdoings and inflicting pain on others. Whichever choice Werner chooses, his life is in

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