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The narrator of The Book Thief is many things -- sardonic, wry, darkly humorous, compassionate -- but not especially proud. As author Marcus Zusak channels him, Death -- who doesn't carry a scythe but gets a kick out of the idea -- is as afraid of humans as humans are of him.
Knopf is blitz-marketing this 550-page book set in Nazi Germany as a young-adult novel, though it was published in the author's native Australia for grown-ups. (Zusak, 30, has written several books for kids, including the award-winning I Am the Messenger.) The book's length, subject matter and approach might give early teen readers pause, but those who can get beyond the rather confusing first pages will find an absorbing and searing narrative.
Death meets the book thief, a 9-year-old girl named Liesel Meminger, when he comes to take her little brother, and she becomes an enduring force in his life, despite his efforts to resist her. "I traveled the globe . . . handing souls to the conveyor belt of eternity," Death writes. "I warned myself that I should keep a good distance from the burial of Liesel Meminger's brother. I did not heed my advice." As Death lingers at the burial, he watches the girl, who can't yet read, steal a gravedigger's instruction manual. Thus Liesel is touched first by Death, then by words, as if she knows she'll need their comfort during the hardships ahead.
And there are plenty to come. Liesel's father has already been carted off for being a communist and soon her mother disappears, too, leaving her in the care of foster parents: the accordion-playing, silver-eyed Hans Hubermann and his wife, Rosa, who has a face like "creased-up cardboard." Liesel's new family lives on the unfortunately named Himmel (Heaven) Street, in a small town on the outskirts of Munich populated by vivid characters: from the blond-haired boy who relates to Jesse Owens to the mayor's wife who hides from despair in her library. They are, for the most part, foul-spoken but good-hearted folks, some of whom have the strength to stand up to the Nazis in small but telling ways.
Stolen books form the spine of the story. Though Liesel's foster father realizes the subject matter isn't ideal, he uses "The Grave Digger's Handbook" to teach her to read. "If I die anytime soon, you make sure they bury me right," he tells her, and she solemnly agrees. Reading opens new worlds to her; soon she is looking for other material for distraction. She rescues a book from a pile being burned by the Nazis, then begins stealing more books from the mayor's wife. After a Jewish fist-fighter hides behind a copy of Mein Kampf as he makes his way to the relative safety of the Hubermanns' basement, he then literally whitewashes the pages to create his own book for Liesel, which sustains her through her darkest times. Other books come in handy as diversions during bombing raids or hedges against grief. And it is the book she is writing herself that, ultimately, will save Liesel's life.
Death recounts all this mostly dispassionately -- you can tell he almost hates to be involved. His language is spare but evocative, and he's fond of emphasizing points with bold type and centered pronouncements, just to make sure you get them (how almost endearing that is, that Death feels a need to emphasize anything). "A NICE THOUGHT," Death will suddenly announce, or "A KEY WORD." He's also full of deft descriptions: "Pimples were gathered in peer groups on his face."
Death, like Liesel, has a way with words. And he recognizes them not only for the good they can do, but for the evil as well. What would Hitler have been, after all, without words? As this book reminds us, what would any of us be?
Reviewed by Elizabeth Chang
Copyright 2006, The Washington Post. All Rights Reserved.
--Ce texte fait référence à l'édition
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Commentaires client les plus utiles
6 internautes sur 6 ont trouvé ce commentaire utile
5.0 étoiles sur 5
Un livre plein d'humanité,
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Ce commentaire fait référence à cette édition : The Book Thief (Broché)
Bien sûr, on peut arguer que c'est un livre de plus consacré à l'Allemagne Nazie, un livre de plus où le héros est une adolescente banale et pourtant exceptionnelle, et ainsi de suite. Mais à la lecture, on oublie tous les clichés pour partager simplement l'histoire de la petite voleuse de livres et des gens qui l'entourent. C'est à lire lentement pour apprécier le style et les nuances du récit - et se laisser piéger par l'émotion malgré soi. A noter que le narrateur n'est autre que la Mort, ce qui rend le ton de l'ensemble encore plus désabusé, résigné - mais aussi émerveillé, par moments.
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2 internautes sur 2 ont trouvé ce commentaire utile
5.0 étoiles sur 5
une bonne surprise,
Par
Ce commentaire fait référence à cette édition : The Book Thief (Broché)
Je n'attendais rien à priori de ce livre. Je ne savais même pas de quoi ça parlait. Et bien j'ai été agréablement surpris. L'histoire est très originale. Mais surtout, c'est la narration par le personnage de la mort qui apporte un plus au livre. Et sans rien dévoilé, l'angle choisi pour raconter cette histoire est lui aussi très original. Le tout sans sacrifier à l'émotion. Une vraie réussite. Auteur à suivre donc...
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5.0 étoiles sur 5
Book club,
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Ce commentaire fait référence à cette édition : The Book Thief (Format Kindle)
We chose this book for our book club, it is a sad heart wrenching story with a poignant ending following a young girl living in Nazi germany. Without doubt a book to be recommended.
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