2024 the best thief in the world review
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(as of Dec 13, 2024 04:17:09 UTC - Details)
BRAND NEW, Exactly same ISBN as listed, Please double check ISBN carefully before ordering.
ASIN : 1909531618
Publisher : Penguin Random House Uk; 10th Anniversary Re-issue edition (February 19, 2016)
Language : English
Paperback : 615 pages
ISBN-10 : 9781909531611
ISBN-13 : 978-1909531611
Item Weight : 15.1 ounces
Dimensions : 1.46 x 5.08 x 7.8 inches
Reviewer: Amazon Customer
Rating: 5.0 out of 5 stars
Title: The Book Thief This is a beautifully balanced piece of storytelling by a young Australian writer
Review: The Book ThiefThis is a beautifully balanced piece of storytelling by a young Australian writer: Marcus Zusak. The book is narrated by death himself. Death is rendered vividly. He is a lonely, haunted being who is drawn to children, who has had a lot of time to contemplate human nature and wonder about it. We are introduced to this narrator in the beginning and he is with us till the very end. It gives away the end and still wants you to keep reading on.The narrative is easy flowing with glimpses of what is yet to come: sometimes misleading, sometimes all too true. We meet all shades of Germans, from truly committed Nazis to the likes of poor Hans Hubermann who hides a Jew in the basement of his very modest home. I was humbled by the realization that most of us are incapable of doing what noble souls Hans and Rosa do for saving the human race. This is what makes this novel truly remarkable.The author says he was inspired by two real-life events related to him by his German parents: the bombing of Munich, and a teenage boy offering bread to an emaciated, withered Jew being marched through the streets. Both the boy and Jewish prisoner were whipped by a soldier while hapless crowd looked on! It is also the way in which Zusak combines such terrible events with truly believable characters and the details of everyday life in Nazi Germany. All this made The Book Thief so special for me.In addition to the protagonist Liesel (the book thief of the title), there are some very important characters in the story. Those who particularly stood out for me are Rudy Steiner, a close friend of Liesel who is obsessed with the black athlete Jesse Owens. Ilsa Hermann, the mayor's wife, who has never recovered from the loss of her own son. Liesel's adoptive parents Hans and Rosa Hubermann and of course Max Vandenburg the Jew decorator whose father had saved Hansâ life during the first world war when they are both German soldiers. The growing relationships between Hubermanns and Liesel and, later, Liesel and Max Vandenburg are central to the plot. Max writes and illustrates a strangely beautiful short story for Liesel over whitewashed pages from a copy of Hitler's Mein Kampf (the original print can still be seen through the paint). The powerful short story and illustrations almost broke my heart.Hans, who canât read very well himself, teaches Liesel to read. Liesel is effectively an orphan. She never knew her father. Her mother disappears after delivering her to her new foster parents. Her younger brother died on the train to Molching where the foster parents live. Death first encounters nine-year-old Liesel when her brother dies. It (death) hangs around long enough to watch Liesel steal her first book - The Gravedigger's Handbook, left lying in the snow by her brother's grave. Death has in his possession (I have always considered death as âsheâ) the book Leisel wrote about 1939 to 1943. In a way, they are both book thieves. Liesel steals randomly at first, and later more methodically. But she's never greedy. Death pockets Liesel's notebook after she leaves it, forgotten in her grief, amongst the destruction that was once her street, her home, her mama and papa. Death carries the book with him.As I went through the book I kept feeling how real Liesel was! She was a child living a child's life. A life that has chores, soccer in the street, stolen pleasures, school fights, sudden passions and a full heart! Around her bombs are dropped, maimed veterans hang themselves, bereaved parents move like ghosts, Gestapo take children away and the dirty skeletons of Jews are paraded through the town.However, there are a number of things that prevent this book from being all-out depressing. It is very powerful from the beginning but not morbid. A lively humor peeks through the pages. (a comment about Germanâs loving pigs, the childish chats between Rudi and Liesel). Furthermore, the vivid descriptions as well as the richness of the characters lift your spirits up. In this balanced story, ordinary Germans - those with blond hair and blue eyes are as much at risk of losing their lives, or are being persecuted, as the Jews themselves. It made me cry.
Reviewer: Virginia L Adkins
Rating: 5.0 out of 5 stars
Title: Captivating! Entertaining! Heart Wrenching! Delightful.
Review: Once you pick up this book and open its fantastical pages, you wonât be able to put it down. Soak it in. Learn from the mistakes and misfortune of our ancestors. Allow your own imagination to take you to places you e never been before. War torn countries and their exhausted populations. The beauty of this book is the spirit of hope that just wonât be extinguished. It is influential in teaching us that only in the darkest night can you see the light of all the stars.
Reviewer: Jen
Rating: 4.0 out of 5 stars
Title: Excellent
Review: I thoroughly enjoyed this book. The only reason it only got four stars from me is because it's a hard topic and so part of me was sad the entire time I read it. It couldn't be any other way really. The charming narrator, sometimes humorous, other times poignant, saves the story from becoming too heart-breaking. A must read.I would like to make a note to whoever is responsible for making books available to Kindle - this note is obviously only for the Kindle version. The punctuation is atrocious! The Kindle version is obviously an OCR scan of the book, but there are so many full stops and opening and closing quotation marks left out it appears that no one proof read the scan before publishing it. I initially thought the author had some deep love of exclamation points, but it seems that often a full stop followed by a closing quotation mark (.') has been turned into an exclamation point (!). I am a bit of a stickler for this kind of thing, and it would be lovely if someone could put a bit of proofreading effort into the Kindle edition, but even this couldn't dampen this beautiful story for me.
Reviewer: Rhea
Rating: 5.0 out of 5 stars
Title: No Words
Review: âFirst the colours.Then the humans.Thatâs usually how I see things.Or at least, how I try.âThe Book Thief is narrated by Death, himself. Deathâalthough portrayed as almost sympatheticâwatches from afar the life of Liesel Meminger who is the thief herself. An adopted daughter to Hans and Rosa Hubermann, she finds her consolation in words.Stolen words that start to give her a sense of camaraderie with her foster father.Stolen words that comfort her neighbors in basements during bombing raids.Stolen words that comfort a Jewish man in her basement.Death has a personality. He warns you ahead of time when something bad is about to happen. He feels the same trepidation, the same sense of foreboding you will when you know somethingâs wrong. Heâs trying to understand the human race as desperately as humans are.Muskus Zusak accomplished a great feat â making me ache for the people and children of Nazi Germany, reminding me that people , whether good or bad, deserved to be loved because they are, after all, only human.This book is an ode to the people who managed to keep their humanity in the midst of war, a tribute to the people who did not succumb to the evil around them and an acknowledgement of all those brave souls who were punished for doing what was right.âSo much good, so much evil. Just add water.âRudy Steiner, the boy with hair the color of lemons, capable of so much love, so much life whose death devastated me. A death that was so casually and off-handedly mentioned by Death. A wasted life with so much potential, so much capability for doing good.âHow about a kiss, Saumensch?âHe stood waist-deep in the water for a few moments longer before climbing out and handing her the book. His pants clung to him, and he did not stop walking. In truth, I think he was afraid. Rudy Steiner was scared of the book thiefâs kiss. He must have longed for it so much. He must have loved her so incredibly hard. So hard that he would never ask for her lips again and would go to his grave without them.âMax Vandenburg, a Jewish nobody but someone youâre going to cry for. He fist fights with the Fuhrer and somehow, heâs going to fight his way into your heart.âTHE LAST WORDS OF MAX VANDENBURG: Youâve done enough.âRosa Hubermann. Sheâs described as being the woman with a filthy mouth and a wardrobe figure. And yet you know. You just know that this woman has a heart of gold. âMake no mistake, the woman had a heart. She had a bigger one that people would think. There was a lot in it, stored up, high in miles of hidden shelving. Remember that she was the woman with the instrument strapped to her body in the long, moon-slit night.âBut if there were a true âheroâ of the story, so to speak, it would be Hans Hubermann. Death, in the earlier parts of the novel, describes Hans Hubermann as the type to slip by you unnoticed. The kind of gentle humility this man is capable of is astounding. And Hansâs ability to be ânot noticeableâ turned out to be his greatest asset. A flashier guy may have not been able to hide a Jew in his basement for almost two years during the Holocaust. Hans has true strength of character as shown by his acts of resistance against the Naziâs and his willingness to risk everything for a Jew, which in those days could have only meant death. âHis soul sat up. It met me. Those kinds of souls always do â the best ones. The ones who rise up and say âI know who you are and I am ready.Not that I want to go, of course, but I will come.â Those souls are always light because more of them have been put out. More of them have already found their way to other places.âI could keep quoting this book forever but at some point words are just words. Whatâs more important is that you remember and believe.Remember that humanity is capable of good even in the worst situations.Believe that amidst sorrow, there is joy. Amidst darkness, there is light. Amidst Death, there is always Life.
Reviewer: Samantha Cook
Rating: 5.0 out of 5 stars
Title: School book
Review: My child loved this book and read it twice.
Reviewer: Manesh Kumar
Rating: 5.0 out of 5 stars
Title:
Review: Good Quality
Reviewer: lajpat ray
Rating: 5.0 out of 5 stars
Title:
Review: "The Book Thief" is a mesmerizing and emotionally charged novel that explores the human experience during World War II. Markus Zusak's masterful storytelling weaves a narrative that is both poignant and powerful.Set in Nazi Germany, the story follows Liesel Meminger, a young girl who discovers the power of words and literature during a time of war and oppression. After losing her brother and being separated from her mother, Liesel is sent to live with a foster family in Molching, Germany. As she navigates her new life, Liesel develops a passion for books and words, which becomes her source of comfort, strength, and resistance.5/5
Reviewer: Elisabeth
Rating: 5.0 out of 5 stars
Title:
Review: Era para regalar y le ha encantado. Lo cierto es que tiene muy buena pinta
Reviewer: lama khalid
Rating: 5.0 out of 5 stars
Title:
Review: i like it i rate it 8/10
Reviewer: Marko
Rating: 4.0 out of 5 stars
Title:
Review: Itâs a dark story yet beautiful. The only complaint I have, is that death(the narrator) couldâve been more elegant in its descriptions. I would say that the book is close to a masterpiece ð
Customers say
Customers find the writing quality clever, inspiring, and charming. They describe the story as heartbreaking, poignant, and touching. Readers praise the pacing as extremely moving and captivating enough to feel the lives of these characters. They also say the characters are believable and well-written. Opinions are mixed on the humor and narrative pace. Some find it humorous and funny, while others say it's sad.
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