Book thief Liesel's life, in the book The Book Thief by Mark Zuasak, represented the beauty in the wake of brutality. Liesel went through a lot of hardship but also saw some of the best things, as in the meaning in friendship and many other things. She also when all odds were against her she would still want to live unlike most people if they were put through some of stuff that she did. She also would take things that were bad and turn them into something good into something that wasn't as awful as it could've been as she got older. Zuasak completes this by the way he tells her story and always by the way he has Death tie in color with everything he was to see as he read Liesel's book. As Liesel was on her way to her foster …show more content…
When Liesel had first started out in her new foster parents house she didn't trust anyone and didn't have any friends. And she didn't really had any until Papa had started to coax her out of the car and then started helping when she had nightmares and teaching her how to roll cigarettes. Then she had found out the meaning of friendship and to be able to trust people again. Also when Max had come to live with them and she had became very very close with Max. She would spend time with him in the basement reading, writing, talking, and imagining things. She then had truly learned then what it was like to become very close to someone. You saw the friendship start and then blossom. I think Mark does a wonderful job at making this beautiful all the way through the book. At first he really makes Liesel seem to have issues with people when she first arrived at her foster parents house. Then he has where she begins to trust and go have friendships start to form. For instance, another point about the beauty in her brutal story is that also when Liesel's family and first love had bombed to death. She had found them dead when she was dug out of the rubble that was her house. And she saw them all before she had her break down and was taken away from Himmel Street. Instead of wishing that she had
In The Book Thief, Liesel Meminger is a caring person. When her foster father, Hans Hubermann, is lecturing Liesel about not telling anyone that they are hiding a jew named Max in their basement; Liesel starts crying. Hans tell her that if she speaks of Max, himself and Liesel’s foster mother Rosa, will be taken away and they will never come back. Liesel starts bawling at this point in the lecture. This shows how much she really cares about her family. Liesel cares about the people that she loves and their presence in her life. Liesel cares about others and fights for justice when she sees someone being treated unfairly. One example of this is when Liesel stands up for Rudy when she sees Victor beating him up and giving him a bloody nose.
Reluctance or stubbornness in ending impulsive actions can have consequences. In the Book Thief by Markus Zusak, Liesel Meminger’s inability to halt her dangerous habits put her and others’ lives in dangerous situations. Three main examples of Liesel’s dangerous activities are when she steals books, when she demonstrates kindness at improper times, and when she disrespects others for her own selfish reasons. In all these examples, there is always one moment where Liesel places her or others in harm’s way and narrowly escapes punishment.
There are many reasons why Liesel’s life shows beauty in the wake of brutality, but the most significant reason is that she has beautiful connections with people, so no matter how brutal things get,
The Holocaust was a brutal event in World War Two and millions of people were killed. Although this occurrence was brutal, beautiful things happened too. Beauty and brutality co-existed throughout the the Holocaust and changed people's lives. Markus Zusak used imagery to represent beauty and brutality co-existing in “The Book Thief” throughout the lives of Liesel, Hans, and Death.
The Book Thief starts out by introducing a young girl by the name of Liesel Meminger. Liesel is forced to move in with foster parents named Rosa and Hans Huberman in Nazi Germany. Liesel grows up with the parents and a new friend Max, a Jew Hans Huberman had promised to keep safe from the Nazis in their basement. Liesel is fascinated with words, so she grows up learning to read and write. She gets so hungry for words, that she steals a book from a fire, hence the name The Book Thief. Max gets taken away, and the street is bombed, leaving almost everyone dead. Liesel miraculously survives, so she goes on to reunite with max, write a book about her journey, and live a long life.
Liesel, the book thief herself, steals books in times of pain. All six books Liesel steals are metaphors for the feelings of loss and pain during the time of which the book was stolen. She uses the books to grow knowledge of the situations occurring around her, one stolen book in particular is “The Gravedigger’s Handbook” This book is the first of all books Liesel steals, and it is the book that caused her to grow to love words, coincidently, she finds this book in the snow on the day of her brother’s death, which is when she was filled with grief and abandonment. This book is a symbol for Liesel’s grief and as she tries to learn how to read the book, her twisted comfort in the story shows how the words had a powerful effect on her grieving process shown by the quotation, “…Not to mention the morbidity of the subject. As for the girl, there was a sudden desire to read it that she didn't even attempt to understand” (Zusak, 66)
In the novel The Book Thief by Markus Zusak, a young girl living in Nazi Germany named Liesel, was given up by her mother and sent to live with her new foster family. Liesel was given to the Hubermanns at ten years old. Throughout Liesel's journey during World War ll she has been abandoned by her mother, her brother Werner, a Jew named Max and her foster papa Hans. Over the course of the novel Liesel Meminger suffers from being abandoned by losing many friends and family that are close to her.
Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. stood up for what he believed in during the 1960’s in order to
Death is so interested in Liesel’s life because she is a survivor and she looks at life through rose colored glasses. Meaning she looks at the good things of bad situations and, she would rather risk her life for her friend, that
The Book Thief by Markus Zusak is about a young girl named Liesel who goes through a series of emotional traumatizing experiences that involves in her losing those she really loves and cares for. An example of this was at the very beginning of the book when her brother dies from a fever and her mother leaves her to be adopted. The main character Liesel goes through a series of positive and negative events that molded her to becoming the character she becomes by the end of the novel. One of whose series of events that is relevant and also contributes towards molding Liesel’s character would be when she becomes an orphan in the beginning of the book, learns how to read, and her reunion with Max.
Death who is the narrator of this book is mesmerized by humans. He is intrigued by all that the world has but what he has trouble with is understanding how humans can commit so much cruelties and hideous action but at the same time have others who are so nice and make the world a much better place to live in. One thing that death tries to accomplish is to treasure new ways that he could make his job and his work more purposeful. One of the ways he attempts to do this is by compiling stories that he finds of brave human beings. He stumbles upon one fascinating story of human named Liesel. He believes that Liesel is like none other than he has ever seen before. He thinks that stories are truly beautiful. He is intrigued in her because of who
Liesel got her first book after her brothers funeral. Liesel first learned how to read and write from Hans her foster dad. When a jewish person named Max came in to hide. Liesel finally had a person to read too. When Max disappeared bombing started to happen. So Liesel had to hide in the basements with other people. People then started to get scared and worry. But Liesel found out a way to calm them down by reading to them. She calmed them down and they started to forget about the war.
You can love someone, and they can love you, but in a second they can be gone forever. In the book thief, liesel lost many people that she loved, like her brother, and mother. But that was changed because she had a new family. She found people that filled in the hole that was there for her. To be there for her again. In the book thief, characters shown that when you lose someone you love, you seek new relationships to fill the void.
When she is with him, she becomes the daylight in the dark basement. Another example of Liesel being a guardian angel is when Liesel gives bread to the Jews that walk in the death march through Munich. To illustrate, she risks being caught, or worse endangering her family, but still puts food on the road for the Jews to take. In my character ode, I write about her dangerous
When there were bomb raids approaching the town, the people gathered in a small basement and Liesel began to read to everyone there. It is amazing how her words would calm everyone present and made them forget that they could possibly die at any given moment. When everything in her life is at a downfall, reading and writing takes Liesel out of this cruel world. That is the main reason why she is attracted to words and books. Words kept her alive in a dull world but also literally kept her living. She was reading in that basement when the bombs hit her street so it saved her. She also developed relationships with people with words and storytelling. In a time like this, a normal conversation will not help. But in order to distract one from reality the best way to do that is to share stories. Max Vandenburg is not in great condition when he arrives, but creates a special bond with Liesel through words. The two have frequent nightmares about their past and losing the ones that they care about the most. Though all this has happened, they both enjoy to story tell and that’s how their bond grows. "Trust me, though, the words were on their way, and when they arrived, Liesel would hold them in her hands like the clouds, and she would wring them out, like the rain (85)". Liesel’s words effected her situation and the perspective of it so much. As words bought friendship to Liesel, it also bought