Postby Eskarina » Thu Feb 14, 2013 7:05 pm
I finished The Book Thief by Markus Zusak several hours ago and I still have absolutely no idea how to describe it, but I'll give it a shot.
For starters, you should know that despite my illusions upon picking the book up, this novel is not a medieval fantasy novel. In fact, I'm laughing at the idea of this novel being the high fantasy I pictured. I can't really be blamed. the person who recommended it reads almost exclusively fantasy.
But this is not fantasy, rather, The Book Thief takes place in the slums of Germany during WWII and it is narrated by Death. Zusak, using this peculiar point of view, tells us about the life of a young girl named Liesel. He sees her first when her little brother dies and she picks a book up out of the snow called The Gravedigger's Handbook (it's about exactly what it sounds like) officially stealing her first book and becoming the book thief.
While you might think that having death as a narrator would make for a rather maudlin story Zusak manages to make him a likeable fellow wh is doing a tough job with as much sympathy as he can muster. It's not as if he likes war. In any case, Death becomes entranced with the book thief and follows her story throughout the war.
The most unusual aspect of the book, besides the voice, is Zusak's style of prose. He writes shorter paragraphs and vignettes that are linked by quick interjections from the the narrator. At times the effect can be a bit jarring, at other times it's touching. For the most part, Zusak pulls it off with considerable finesse. No one can deny the man knows how to turn a sentence. My favorite was:
"Trust me, though, the words were on their way, and when they arrived, Liesel would hold them in her hands like the clouds, and she would wring them out like rain." (Page 80)
It's sentences like that, that will keep you coming back to The Book Thief, even knowing that a book about WWII and narrated by death will eventually break your heart.
More so than any other theme, The Book Thief is about words and their power. Leisel grows from a little girl with no words to a woman whois in the process of becoming quite eloquent. Zusak's book is powerful because it reminds us that words have power. He is quick to remind us that the greatest of evils can be perpetrated through a charismatic man with the right words, and the best of deeds can be accomplished with only a whisper.
Perhaps the best thing I can do to end this review is warn you that, should you choose to read The Book Thief, you won't be able to forget it. It's one of those rare books that makes it's way into your heart and stays.
Title: The Book Thief
Author: Mark Zusak
Genre: historical fiction
Rating: 5/5
Next up: Warm Bodies by Isaac Marion
What I know about: it's about a zombie named R with an existential crisis who falls in love with a human girl.
Interested?
Join me as I make my virgin foray into zombie territory.
So much universe, so little time...