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Issue:
11.01
 
Important dates

This Month...

Editor's Comment
Michael looks at:
Farewell, Shalom and Adieu

Being Jewish Magazine


see a .pdf copy of the current issue

Features
An Open Letter from Abba to His Family

Enough With The Political Finger-Pointing!

Revisiting the Haggadah

Eddy's Recipe List
Victoria Sponge

Book Review List

The Outspeaker
Encouraging violence is never correct

Batya
Good times and bad times with Batya


Marjorie Wolfe
An Interview with Paul Reiser

BC's Backlot
The Last Shalom

This And That
My Treasure Chest

Three Symbols of Passover

Stress

Lynn Ruth Miller
How we all became part of a bigger story

Mel Yahre
A few words for my friend

Eddy's Thoughts
Don't let life flutter by

The Bear Facts
How I found Michael

 
The Book Thief 
by: Markus Zusak  
January 8, 2010

Death narrates this story, which opens with the passing of six-year-old Werner Meminger on a train in 1939. He leaves behind his mother and nine-year-old sister, Liesel, the book thief.

The two children were on their way to a foster home with Hans and Rosa Hubermann in Molching, near Munich – and Dachau. Liesel arrives at the Hubermanns’ alone, bereft of brother and mother. A copy of The Grave Digger’s Handbook is hidden in her suitcase. The book, stolen from the cemetery where her brother was buried, is all that she has left of her family.

Despite its grim beginning, The Book Thief ultimately focuses less on loss and more on the gift of human connection. The Hubermanns live on Himmel – or Heaven – Street. For Liesel, life on Himmel Street becomes a taste of heaven she carries a lifetime.

Her rough foster father has angered the local Nazi Party, which refuses to accept him as a member. As a result, his painting jobs are disappearing. Rosa Hubermann is an angry woman as quick with a humiliating curse as she is a stinging wooden spoon. Her rage grows as customer after customer falls away when times grow harder. Rudy Steiner, the boy next door, welcomes Liesel to the neighborhood with a mud-filled snowball in the face when she deflects one of his usually unstoppable soccer kicks.

Yet, it’s Hans who soothes Liesel through nightmares by reading aloud to her. He ultimately teaches her to read, first by drawing letters with a thick painter’s pencil on sandpaper and later in paint on the basement walls. Rosa opens her basement and food coupon books to Max Vandenburg, son of a Jewish man who had taught Hans how to play the accordion and saved his life in World War I.

Rudy becomes her best friend, partner in book and other essential thefts and defender from teachers and neighborhood children. Max, who has nothing, creates a story book from pages of Hitler’s Mein Kampf, coated in white house paint and written in black as a gift to Liesel. Liesel, who has nothing, brings Max discarded newspaper crossword puzzles. When Max falls ill and goes into a coma, Liesel brings him a daily gift – a stone, a leaf, a written description of a cloud she saw.

The Book Thief is a story of ordinary people dealing with extraordinary times. Some do so with great generosity of soul, others with expediency and desire for personal gain. Whether deserving or not, the privations and bombs of war fall on them all. Some survive. Some don’t.

The lucky ones are those who have managed to steal a piece of each other’s hearts.

Submitted by: Jeannette M. Hartman
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