My To Be Read challenges continues, with my 7th out of 12 selections: the latest book I’ve read is The Book Thief by Markus Zusak.
[ An aside you may find important: The Book Thief is classified as a Young Adult (teen) novel, but it is also one of those books written for the teen audience that has captivated a large number of adult readers.]
Back to character and tone. At the centre of the book is Liesel Meminger, probably the most endearing character I’ve encountered in fiction in many years. Ten years old at the start of the novel and about to be left with foster parents by a mother who can no longer raise her. The book opens with Liesel, her mother and her younger brother traveling by train to the home of her new family. Without warning, her brother dies. Stopped in an unknown town for the funeral of her brother, Liesel finds a book The Grave Digger’s Handbook and keeps it: thus setting her up as the titular book thief of the story.
There is a reason that this book has become popular with adult readers as well as youth: for me that reason is that it offers a different take on a moment in history that many readers have explored extensively. Stylistically the book feels fresh: it mixes text and occasional images, offers a unique narrative perspective and jumps back and forth through time, framing the story with small details from the future and the past that serve to keep the reader on the edge of his or her seat. In addition to that, it is a book that is filled with humanity in a place where you expect to find none. The book highlights the horrors of the Nazi regime, and of the people who believed in its message, but also reminds readers that there were many Germans who didn’t buy into Hilter’s propaganda, and who themselves suffered while trying to live within (and quietly work against) the political system that surrounded them. The Book Thief also offers an important commentary on the power of words: to enlighten and to comfort but also to corrupt.
The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time by Mark Haddon: a good match in tone and style for The Book Thief, although the topic is quite different. Also written as a novel for teens, and achieving popularity with adult audiences, this book is from the perspective of a young autistic boy who tries to solve the murder of a dog. Like the Book Thief, it is somewhat whimsical despite its serious topic, and incorporates drawings into the text.
Source: http://www.thereader.ca/2008/08/tbr-reading-challenge-book-thief-by.html