Saturday, March 22, 2014

Thoughts on The Book Thief - A Brief Review

“I wanted to tell the book thief many things, about beauty and brutality.  But what could I tell her about those things that she didn’t already know? I wanted to explain that I am constantly overestimating and underestimating the human race – that rarely do I ever simply estimate it. I wanted to ask her how the same thing could be so ugly and so glorious, and its words and stories so damning and brilliant…I am haunted by humans.”

After reading The Book Thief by Markus Zusak twice now I am so struck with not only the creative narration, but the brilliant characterization and the truly haunting picture it paints of humanity.  War brings out both the worst and the best in humanity, though most would say it brings out more of the worst than the best.  A German town with a Nazi mayor certainly doesn’t sound like a stage set for goodness and mercy, but that’s exactly what readers find in Molching, Zusak’s fictional town based on Olching, Germany.  The Hubermanns have lost their to two children to the terrors of adulthood and have conflict with their grown son who is a Nazi Party member and off fighting in Stalingrad.  The Hans and Rosa originally take in their foster daughter, Liesel, solely for the income allowance it will give them during the lean time of rationing and lessened work opportunities.  Rosa is harsh at best, but she is also loving to the core and she instills in Liesel a self-sufficiency and respect that is critical to her survival as a young German girl who has been orphaned and faces persecution due to her Communist parentage and illiteracy.  Hans is more overtly loving from the first moments, and his lesson ifor Lieel is to always honor your commitments and stand up for what you believe is right.  Rudy, Liesel’s best friend, shows her loyalty and love and how to live life to the fullest despite the world falling apart around them.  Finally, the mayor’s wife, Ilsa Hermann, exemplifies what can happen when the values you’ve been made to cling to are called into question by none other than a young child and the lessons that can be learned even in adulthood that go against previous indoctrination.


The choice of Death as a narrator is unique and probably makes the greatest statement of the whole novel.  Perhaps the best message is that we should all live our lives in such a way that Death takes a break from his duties, that he becomes so enthralled with life, that he is forevermore haunted by humans.