Image having to leave home with a mother and brother, your brother dying on the way, a mother leaving you with a strange new family, never seeing them again, then making new friends and family, then all die from a bombing. That’s exactly what happened to Liesel Meminger in The Book Thief by Markus Zusak. Through all these hardships Liesel endures in her new life she carries her heart for her books new family,and new home. In the first place, Liesel is a very loving person, but her love for reading is so strong. “Beneath her shirt a book was eating her up,” This quote was taken from the part of the book burning for Hitler's birthday. Not only was the book, but this is a metaphor. Yes the book is burning her physically, but mentally Liesel is craving reading and learning how. She is starving yet she craves a book. She wanted to read more than eat at that very moment.”Books everywhere!’ Liesel has never had an education from what we know. Too see a whole bunch of books that have information in the for Liesel to read and learn its like candy. For us who have had schooling we don't understand and we never will. Liesel wants to learn and read. She loves it. …show more content…
THrough out the story liesel shows her love for her papa, but it starts when liesel has nightmares ,and hans comforts her. “Possibly the only good think too come out of these nightmares, was that it brought hans hubermann, her new papa, into the room, too soothe her, too love her.” (Zusak36) Liesel thought that she lost everything. When hans started comforting her she began too have hope for happyness. Another person Liesel loves is max. Although not family by blood, they have a strong relation ship and in the end you see that. Max finds leisel after the bombing 2 years later. ¨Liesel came out. They hugged and vried and fell too the floor.¨
20 July 1944, Colonel Claus von Stauffenberg placed his briefcase beside the Fuhrer and left for a phone call. Moments later an explosion rocked the compound but the Fuhrer was alive and Stauffenberg paid with his life later that very same day. Although Hans Hubermann is just a character in Marcus Zusak’s novel, The Book Thief, he too resisted the Fuhrer and his party. Hans was an anti-Nazi much the same as Stauffenberg, although they went about their resistance in radically different ways, they both worked against the oppression that the Third Reich instilled upon the land it occupied.
Liesel had a very gravitational pull toward words and “When she came to write her story, she would wonder exactly when the books and the words started to mean not just something, but everything” (Zusak, 30). Liesel realized the importance of life and when she wrote her story, The Book Thief, “there was so much to consider, so many things in danger of being left out” (Zusak, 527). Liesel grew to not only touch the pages of books, but feel them
What kind of person is Liesel in The Book Thief? Liesel can be described as caring, curious, and friendly. You see that she is caring throughout the book, including the time when Max is staying at the Hubermann’s house. She is worried about his wellbeing, and she is willing to stay with him, even when the conditions are poor, it may put her at risk and she would be missing out on other things. Liesel puts others before herself in many instances which has shown how caring she truly is.
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.
Are we ever going to get out of this nightmare and survive? This question was being asked all around the world, but especially by Liesel and her family. Liesel is the main character of “The Book Thief.” Her and her family lived in Germany, where Nazis were dominant. She was very reserved, introverted, and non-outgoing, but her personality was about to change drastically. Liesel started stealing books. The first book she stole was the gravedigger's handbook, which she??? dropped at her brother's funeral. This marked the beginning of Liesel deceiving her family. The central idea of “The Book Thief” is stealing, which is going to flip Liesel’s world upside down. As the book continues, Liesel’s experiences during World War II are revealed.
Liesel says, “I’m not stupid,” after assaulting Ludwig Schmeikl. This is the first time Liesel truly speaks up for herself after being mistreated so frequently. Ludwig teases her about how she struggles to read, berating her in front of the entire class, and Liesel physically attacks him after class, gaining back the respect she deserves. She is standing up for herself which indicates change in character and positive growth. She wordlessly left her biological mother only to be subjected to verbal abuse by her foster mom and has to face her peers constantly undermining her in class. Liesel is merely a child and a human being and justifiably reaches her breaking point. Liesel has been attacked repeatedly resulting from the cruel ways she is treated and in her class she finally snaps. With each punch she demands her right to have basic human respect back. #positivegrowth
When Liesel had nightmares, “He came in every night and sat with her. The first couple of times, he simply stayed-a stranger to kill the aloneness. A few nights after that, he whispered, ‘Shhh, I’m here, it’s all right.’ After three weeks, he held her. Trust was accumulated quickly, due primarily to the brute strength of the man’s gentleness, his thereness”(Zusak 36). Hans helped Liesel through her brutal nightmares. To have a friendship that connects through Liesel’s nightmares, is beautiful because Hans and Liesel trust each other. Furthermore, Hans lived through World War One, described as, “The conversation of bullets. Resting men. The best dirty jokes in the world. Cold sweat - that malignant little friend - outstaying its welcome in the armpits and trousers”(Zusak 175). How brutal it must have been for Hans to watch friends die right before his eyes during war. However, it is beautiful because Hans was the only soldier to survive, because of his best friend, Erik Vandenburg. Erik saved his life, which is a debt that can not be repaid. To continue, Liesel noticed that Hans’ eyes “Were made of kindness, and silver. Like soft silver, melting. Liesel, upon seeing those eyes, understood that Hans Hubermann was worth a lot”(Zusak 34). Silver eyes represent sadness, reliability, and old age. It is beautiful describing eyes as “soft silver” but brutal because Liesel sees her foster father's sadness in his eyes. Liesel knew Hans was valuable to her life, and that he has experienced brutal things. Hans’ life was brutal and beautiful while having relationships with
Liesel Meminger aka the book thief is not any ordinary kid. She lived without a father and lost both her mother and brother at the age of 9, while being sent away to a new family the Hubermann at the Himmel Street. In the Hubermann's home Liesel finds two loving, caring, and opposite people, Hans and Rosa Hubermann who would help and teach her to survive and grow. While foster mother, Rosa is loud, harsh, and likes to use the word saumensch or female pig to address Liesel, foster father Hans is softer and shows more affectionate to Liesel.
"No matter how many times she was told she was loved there was no recognition that the proof was in the abandonment" (Zusak 32). The novel The Book Thief by Markus Zusak is the story of Liesel Meminger, a young girl who struggles through WWII and faces the pain and suffering of abandonment. When one is faced with such an abandonment and is forced to cope on their own, they may feel lost and alone. These emotions force people to find comfort. As in Liesel 's case, some people find comfort in books and words. Liesel 's perspective on abandonment can be seen through how she coped with her childhood trauma, Max 's illness and the Himmel Street bombing.
A small street, Himmel Street, which is home to the house of Hans and Rosa Hubermann. Rosa and Hans foster 9-year old Liesel (an orphan), despite her brother passing away on the train. Furthermore, the Hubermann’s take in Max Vandenburg, a Jew who had saved Hans’s life. Despite the loss of her brother, a changing environment, and a new family Liesel discovers a joy of reading and knowledge which helps her become accustomed to her new life. This is the story of Liesel in The Book Thief by Markus Zusak.
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.
In difficult times, one must look for an outlet in order to provide themselves comfort and to distract themselves from their own thoughts. Books and stories can provide one with this joyous escape, as it did with Liesel Meminger. By personifying inanimate objects, Zusak creates a sense happiness and life that books provide Liesel in The Book Thief. When describing Liesel’s relationship with Mrs. Hermann’s shelves and books, Death uses personification to develop the intimate relationship that she has with Mrs. Hermann’s library.
Many factors contribute to shaping Liesel's personality, the most evident being all the suffering she had to see and go through as a child. It's known that one would experience emotional damage after a traumatizing event, or in Liesel's case, events. Despite that, she was one of the most caring characters in the novel. Liesel willingly read stories to calm
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 book 's importance is explained through Death where ‘“The books meaning 1. The last time she saw her brother. 2. The last time she saw her mother.” Despite Liesel being illiterate, the Gravedigger’s handbook holds significant meaning for the character. Liesel has an overwhelming feeling of loss of control and acts out in rebellion to steal the book that lay beside her brothers grave. By stealing the book, she has a reminder of her small family and it stops her feeling defeated by her ever changing life, which she has no control over. This idea is then reinforced with another action of the character. Liesel then finds out that Hitler was the cause of the suffering and loss of freedom of the people she loved and knew in her life.This second act of rebellion takes place while Liesel visits a Nazi book burning. Liesel soon understands that the Nazi’s burnt books to brainwash citizens of Germany(_____). As a result of this Lisel then understands the importance and power words have, causing her to again acts rebelliously in a protest. “And it was anger and dark hatred that had fueled her desire to steal it.” This passage from the novel shows the emotions of Liesel. As a character who is unable to express herself verbally, her actions speak for her. Liesel 's desire to understand words begins to grow, with her understanding that Nazis burn books in fear of what they may do to society.