Wednesday, November 27, 2013

The Standover Man

From pages 221-236 Liesel finds a "book" that the Jew that is hiding in her basement wrote.  Of course more happened in this chapter.  Max the Jew came to the door of the Hubermanns.  Hans and Rosa had to let him in because Hans owed Max's dad a favor.  They where friends in the army but max's Father died.  Max lives in the basement hiding from the Germans.  Liesel slowly teaches him how to read and write. Of course that is how Max wrote "The Standover Man".  Its about how people always stood over him and were more important then him.  But in the end he discovers that the most important stand over man to him wasn't actually a man but just a girl, Liesel.




Hans owes the Vandenburg's a favor because Max's father saved Hans' life during WWI


Liesel brought Max extra food.  She helped him learn to read and write by writing on the wall in the basement with Han's paint.


Friday, November 22, 2013

The Book of Fire

Liesel now stole her second book!  Of course as you can tell from the title she steals it from fire.  The Nazis were burning books and as the fire was burning out Liesel reached in and grabbed a book.  She stole it after little hesitation.  At first it was to hot to hide because it was hot.  But it was wet to so it wasn't burning.  After a while she was able to put it into her coat and there you have it, book #2, stolen.  After the book got to hot in her shirt she pulled it out and showed it to Hans,  then she realized it was called The Shoulder Shrug.


Click on the picture.


Liesel's third book came to her, she didn't steal it. Of course she didn't exactly like it, because it was written by Hitler.  Mein Kampf.  Liesel gets it from Hans after he buys it for a few cigs.  This is book number three in Liesels very special collection of books.








Thursday, November 21, 2013

Figurative Language about the Book Thief

Figuramative Language  (Figurative Language)


Lots of figuratively every where in the Book Thief.  If you look really hard you can probably find an example of every type of figurative language.  Heres a few for ya.

  1. Double Epithet-  "You Dummkopf- you Idiot."(Zusak, 78).( This is what the kids in her school were calling when she couldn't read a word.  And for some reason the book she wanted to read a book called "The Grave Diggers Handbook".  I'm not sure what she needed that for...

Click on the Picture.
    2.Metaphor-"A Girl Made of Darkness"(Zusak, 83).  This is the title of one of the chapters in The           Book Thief.  Obviously the girl is not made out of darkness, I think. But if this was a simile it                 would have like or as in it, so its a metaphor.
METAPHORS

    3.Personification-"Dead Letters"(Zusak, 97),  Another title of a chapter, these two words are pure personification.  The letters are definitely not dead because they were never living.  Giving a object human qualities is personification.

    4.Metonymy-"The book penned by the Füher himself"(Zusak, 125).  A metonymy is when a you replace a word with a attribute of that word like penned for wrote or eyes for sight.  If you take this sentence like it is then it doesn't make any sense but take it as a metonymy and it means Hitler wrote a book.




As you can probably tell The Book Thief is a very figurative book.  The reason for this is that the book is narrated by death itself.  Which is also figurative because death is personified.  So this book is Figurative inside a narrated by figurativity.








Friday, November 15, 2013

The Grave Digger's Handbook



If you have read "The Book Thief" or are reading you probably know what I'm talking about.  Liesel, the main character, steals her first book.  Of course its from the grave digger that was burying Liesel's brother who died on the train too there new guardians, the Hubermanns, which Liesel now had to live with by herself.

The first book of the story of Liesel will bring you a little bit of everything, from Rosa Hubermann, her ungrateful foster mom, to almost having to kiss Rudy Steiner, her strange neighbor. Its describes what it was like living as a German citizen in a small town near the large German city of Munich under the rule of Hitler.  Also Liesel beats up another shool mate during recess. "She stood up and took the book from him and as he smiled over his shoulder at some other kids she threw it away and kicked him as hard as she could in the vicinity of the groin"(  In the prologue there was tons of figurative language because it was narrated through deaths eyes. 

Jesse Owens <---  Click