The Book Thief‚ by Markus Zusak‚ has caused me to have multiple reactions‚ to the story‚ characters‚ and themes. They have made me feel mad‚ sad‚ upset‚ happy‚ but most of all surprised; throughout the recent readings every night more gets added to the story and more just surprises me. What completely shocked/surprised me was when Liesel fought back against Ludwig Schmeikl and what followed afterwards. However‚ there has been far more things than just that‚ that have surprised me. A couple include
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by indigenous Hutu extremists. While most of the world took no action to stop the bloodshed‚ Paul Rusesabagina‚ a hotel manager‚ curtained more than a thousand Tutsis inside his hotel. Similarly in The Book Thief‚ one such man‚ Hans Hubermann‚ put his own and his family’s life at risk to save a Jew. Hans Hubermann took a Jew‚ named Max Vandenburg‚ into his home to save him from imprisonment even when it went against everything he was taught about. At that time‚ the Jews‚ according to Hitler‚ were
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Chapter 4: 1. Elie’s first impression of the camp at Buna was that it looked empty and dead as if an epidemic had hit. 2. Elie and his father have to work in a factory where they fix electrical circuits. 3. The Jewish dentist is caught stealing the prisoner’s gold teeth and was ordered to be hung. 4. The part of Elie’s body that is aware of the passage of time is his stomach because he goes a long time without getting anything to eat. 5. Idek accused Elie’s father of being lazy
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Throughout this journal‚ one can question why the author wrote the book from the perspective of death and what will happen to Max Vandenburg. Initially‚ there is the question of why the narrator of the novel is the entity of death. One answer to this question is that writing the book through death’s perspective is both creative and different. Having death speaking personally to you on the first page is a unique draw-in. There are no other books popularly known that can claim to have such a narrator‚ which
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In “The Book Thief‚” a lot of themes are present‚ but one of the predominant themes happens to be the power of words. Throughout the book‚ Liesel Meminger as well as Hans Hubermann‚ and Max Vandenburg‚ use the power of words to “escape” the horrors of Germany. It was not only that the power of words had a positive impact; it also had a negative one on society. In the novel‚ the power of words seems to give an antipathetic impact‚ but it was not always like that. As previously stated‚ the power of
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storm enlivens the normal walk that Elizabeth took in the book‚ Pride and Prejudice. It spices things up for what was supposed to be a normal walk‚ but turned into a frightful and awkward experience for Elizabeth but a hilarious experience for the reader. The story’s chain of event flowed smoothly in correspondence with the book‚ without creating a whole new story line for the book or changing the events that actually occurred in the book after he took her usual walk. It just added background/side
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The Book Thief Dialectical Journal Assignment Due on/before ________________________ The Assignment: 1. In your notebook‚ complete a dialectical journal** (two-column notes) in which you discuss your author’s language and style. (See “Ideas for Analyzing Text.”) 2. Meet the required number (15) of concrete details in your journal notes. * See the page labeled “How to Choose Quotations…” for these requirements. *Dialectic: “The art or practice of arriving at the truth by using conversation involving
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life. From The Book Thief by Markus Zusak‚ this incident ties into the chapter “The Book of Fire” on page 114. This chapter is about how Liesel is waiting for Hans and his pal to finish a conversation when she notices Nazi’s burning Jewish items. There was a fire and it contained Half a red flag‚ two posters advertising a Jewish poet‚ three books‚ and a wooden sign with something written in Hebrew on it. Liesel notices the books and immediately intrigued by them. She wants one. The books are speaking
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Markus Zusak’s The Book Thief has a good example of this within it’s pages. Alex Steiner‚ a German shop owner‚ does not support the Nazis or Anti-Semitism‚ but still joins the party‚ so he can get more business‚ and therefore more food and money for his wife and kids. An even
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Not Conforming to Beliefs In both The Book Thief by Marcus Zusak and The Merchant of Venice by William Shakespeare‚ some characters demonstrate hypocrisy in their words and actions. Though there are other traits that the characters show‚ such as cruelty and mercy‚ hypocrisy is one of the more interesting ones. The Duke demonstrates hypocrisy in The Merchant of Venice during the trial scene when he punishes Shylock for not showing Antonio mercy. Antonio shows he is a hypocrite in The Merchant of
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