Markus Zusak
2005
978-0-375-84220-7
Liesel meminger is the daughter of a communist - a precarious thing to be in 1939 Germany. She is given to a foster family in a new town, and she is taught to read from a gravedigger's manual - the first book she steals.
Words become her life, along with her new papa and Max, the Jewish fighter who is living in their basement. Max, who depends on Liesel to be his eyes in a terrifying, hateful world. There is also Rudy, the boy next door, her best friend and partner in crime, who can't understand why she steals books and not food.
Liesel is watched by the narrator, the busiest narrator during one of his busiest periods, and he shares her story in her own words.
Exquisitely crafted, this story lures you in to a life of everyday poverty, the spectre of war and of battles with bullies. There is humour to be found here, and love. And heartbreak.
This is a story that will stick with me for a long time to come. It is haunting and chilling, intense in dark moments and endearing in lighter ones.
This is a story that I'm immensely grateful to have found.
Finished 16/11/13.
Read for Online Book Club December group read
Showing posts with label war. Show all posts
Showing posts with label war. Show all posts
Saturday, November 16, 2013
Tuesday, June 17, 2008
The Officers' Ward
Marc Dugain
1998
1-86159-177-2
Lieutenant Adrian, arriving at the front lines at the beginning of the Great War, is blown up on his very first day and removed to Paris, where he spends the entire war in a hospital ward built especially for men who have lost their faces.
Between operations to repair the damage and rebuild what they can, Adrian finds three friends, and together they find the strength to continue living in the face of fear and pity in the outside world.
Written sparsely, this book is strangely moving; in spite of the sometimes bald narration, you are drawn in to the world of the sheltered and injured, so that the ending is both poignant and heartbreaking. This was a surprise find, and one that will be with me for a long time.
Date finished: 17/06/08
Year total: 23
1998
1-86159-177-2
Lieutenant Adrian, arriving at the front lines at the beginning of the Great War, is blown up on his very first day and removed to Paris, where he spends the entire war in a hospital ward built especially for men who have lost their faces.
Between operations to repair the damage and rebuild what they can, Adrian finds three friends, and together they find the strength to continue living in the face of fear and pity in the outside world.
Written sparsely, this book is strangely moving; in spite of the sometimes bald narration, you are drawn in to the world of the sheltered and injured, so that the ending is both poignant and heartbreaking. This was a surprise find, and one that will be with me for a long time.
Date finished: 17/06/08
Year total: 23
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