The Book Thief is narrated by Death, who tells us
the story of Liesel Meminger. It's January 1939,
and Liesel, who is about ten-years-old, is traveling
by train with her mother and her little brother
Werner. Liesel and Werner are being taken to the
small town of Molching, just outside of Munich,
Germany, to live with foster parents Hans and
Rosa Hubermann. Werner dies on the train of
mysterious causes having to do with poverty,
hunger, cold, and lack of medical treatment.
Before Liesel arrives in Molching, she attends her
brother's burial in a snowy graveyard. She steals
The Grave Digger's Handbook from the cemetery
after it falls from a young grave digger's coat. The
kicker is, Liesel can't read.
Liesel is reluctant to enter the Hubermann house
on Himmel Street, but is coaxed by her foster
father, Hans, to whom she takes an immediate
liking. She's not sure about Rosa, though. Liesel
begins school, but suffers because she doesn't
know how to read yet. She also meets Rudy
Steiner, who is soon to be her best friend, not to
mention her partner in book and food thievery.
One night, Hans finds The Grave Digger's
Handbook hidden in Liesel's mattress after her
usual nightmare of seeing her brother dying on
the train. This is what inspires him to begin
teaching her to read. When Liesel learns to write,
she begins composing letters to her mother, but
these letters go unanswered. Finally, we find out
that her mother has disappeared.
Liesel becomes aware of what it really means to be
living in Nazi Germany when a book burning is
organized to celebrate Adolph Hitler's birthday on
April 20, 1940. She finds the mound of literature
being burned fascinating yet disturbing. Now that
she can read and write, she has come to see great
value in books and words. When Liesel hears a
Nazi spokesman calling for death to communists
as well as Jews, a light bulb goes off. The only
thing she knows about her father is that he was
accused of being a communist. She realizes that
Hitler is likely behind her father's disappearance,
her brother's death, and her mother's
disappearance.
When Hans confirms her suspicions after the book
burning, Hitler becomes Liesel's sworn enemy.
This is a dangerous conflict for a young girl in Nazi
Germany. Hans warns her against voicing her anti-
Hitler opinions in public. This conflict helps drive
Liesel to steal her second book, The Shoulder
Shrug, from the burning pile of books.
Turns out that Erik Vandenburg, a Jewish man,
saved Hans's life during World War I, giving up his
own life in the process. After the war, Hans visited
Erik's widow and young son. Now, that son is 22
and is hiding from the Nazis. His name is Max, and
Hans is his last hope for survival. Upon learning of
his plight, Hans readily helps arrange for Max's
journey to Himmel Street. When the desperately
starving and exhausted young man arrives, Hans
and Rosa hide him in their home. At first, Liesel
isn't sure what to think of Max, but they soon
make fast friends. Meanwhile, Max's arrival and
his suffering produce a change in Rosa, for the
better. Liesel is amazed to see her courage and
her softness.
Hiding a Jewish person in your home during World
War II is one of the most brave and frightening
things a German person could do. It means a
constant state of paranoia for all involved. For
Max, it means extreme guilt for putting the lives
of those he's come to love in danger. But, above
all, it means friendship for the residents of the
Hubermann home, and complicated friendship at
that.
Liesel has also entered into a complicated almost-
friendship with the mayor's wife, Ilsa Hermann.
Ilsa saw Liesel steal the The Shoulder Shrug. She
also pays Rosa to do her laundry. When Liesel
comes to Ilsa's house on laundry visits, she invites
Liesel into the library to read. When Ilsa has to
stop using Rosa's services, Liesel begins stealing
books from her, though Ilsa doesn't seem to mind.
Everything changes in October of 1942 when "The
parade of Jews" (55.4) comes through Molching on
the way to the nearby concentration camp Dachau
. Hans feels compelled to offer one of the Jewish
prisoners a piece of bread and is whipped along
with the prisoner by a Nazi guard. Now Hans is
desperately afraid the Nazis will search his house
and find Max, so he sends Max away that very
night. His house is never searched, and Hans
berates himself constantly, waiting to be punished
for his mistake.
One day, Liesel sees the Gestapo (Nazi secret
police) on Himmel Street, and Hans thinks they
are coming for him. In fact, they are coming for
Rudy, who has recently shown himself to be a
great student and athlete. The Gestapo wants to
take Rudy to a special training school. His parents
protest and essentially make a trade. Rudy stays
home, but his father, Alex Steiner, is conscripted
into the military and has to leave home. Around
this time, Hans is also conscripted, as punishment
for giving the Jewish man bread.
With Hans and Max gone, Liesel does her best to
go on. She reads to the residents of Himmel Street
in the bomb shelter during air raids, thieves with
Rudy, and helps Rosa. One night, Rosa shows her
the book Max left for her, a book written on
painted-over pages of Adolph Hitler's book Mein
Kampf. It's called The Word Shaker and includes a
story by the same name.
In February 1943, just after Liesel's fourteenth
birthday, Liesel and Rosa get word that Hans is
coming home. He broke his leg in a bus accident,
and his sergeant is transferring him back to
Munich.
In August of 1943, Liesel sees Max again. He's
marching through Molching to Dachau. She walks
with him in the procession. Liesel learns that he
was captured some six months earlier, about five
months after he left the house on Himmel Street.
The Nazi guards don't take well to Liesel's
courageous display, and Liesel and Max are both
whipped. Rudy stops Liesel from following Max
any further and possibly saves her life.
Soon after, Liesel decides to give up books and Ilsa
Herman's library. Ilsa presents her with a blank
book, and Liesel begins writing the story of her
life, called The Book Thief. She writes in the
basement, and she's doing just this when Himmel
Street is bombed. Everybody she loves dies while
they sleep. In despair over their deaths, Liesel
drops her book, but it's picked up by Death. Since
Liesel has nobody left, the police hold her, not sure
what to do with her. Soon Ilsa Hermann arrives
and takes her in for a time. Alex Steiner comes
home soon after, and Liesel spends time with him.
As the novel comes to a close, we first learn that
Liesel has died after living a long and happy life
with a husband, kids, and grandkids. Then we
learn Max survived the concentration camp, and
he and Liesel reunited at the end of World War II.
But, we don't learn what happens to Max after
that. The novel ends with Death giving Liesel back
her book, The Book Thief, as he's taking her soul
away from her body.
Monday, August 11, 2014
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