Title: The Book Thief Corbin Lynn Author: Markus Zusak Publisher: Knopf New York # of Pages: 550 Range of Appeal: 14- Adult Review: The Book Thief gives us a view into the life of Liesel Meminger through the eyes of the narrator, Death. Liesel is a 9 year old girl who is adopted into a family that lives in a small town in Nazi Germany. With the help of her accordion-playing foster father, she ignites a passion for reading. Liesel grows and expands her thievery into other areas
title “The Book Thief” you would instantaneously connect it with a person stealing a book, it is. It is about Liesel Meminger who had developed a great love for books and words, because of this great love and passion for it, she stole books, books that made her who she was. But, Liesel is not the only one who is a book thief, Death, in a way, is also a book thief for he took Liesel’s book; her own book entitled The Book Thief, to be precise. However, The Book Thief is not all about books, stealing
Curiosity makes the mind more active, observant, and it opens up more possibilities to the mind. Black Boy, by Richard Wright, tells a story about a young black boy discovering what is expected of him in the Jim Crow South. Richard is a black boy in the South that lives in constant poverty. He is interested in what possibilities the world has to offer, so he wants to move North where he will not be held back by the ways of life in the South. Throughout the story, Richard is met by characters Granny