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The Book Thief

The Book Thief

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Author: Markus Zusak
Publisher: Black Swan
Category: Book

List Price: £7.99
Buy New: £4.27
You Save: £3.72 (47%)



New (20) Used (8) Collectible (1) from £3.85

Avg. Customer Rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars 345 reviews
Sales Rank: 13

Media: Paperback
Pages: 560
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.8
Dimensions (in): 7.6 x 5 x 1.4

ISBN: 0552773891
EAN: 9780552773898
ASIN: 0552773891

Publication Date: January 1, 2008
Availability: Usually dispatched within 1-2 business days
Shipping: International shipping available
Condition: Brand New. Shipped from UK Mainland. Delivery is usually 2 - 3 working days from order by Royal Mail, International Delivery is by Airmail.

Also Available In:

  • Paperback - The Book Thief
  • Hardcover - The Book Thief (Book Sense Book of the Year Children's Literature (Awards))
  • Paperback - The Book Thief (Readers Circle)
  • Library Binding - The Book Thief
  • Hardcover - The Book Thief
  • Paperback - The Book Thief
  • Paperback - The Book Thief
  • Hardcover - The Book Thief (Literacy Bridge Young Adult)
  • Library Binding - Book Thief
  • Audio CD - The Book Thief
  • Paperback - The Book Thief (Definitions)
  • Hardcover - The Book Thief

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Editorial Reviews:

Amazon.co.uk Review
The Book Thief by Marcus Zusak was the best-selling debut literary novel of the year 2007, selling over 400,000 copies. The author is a prize-winning writer of children's books, and this, his first novel for adults, proved to be a triumphant success. The book is extraordinary on many levels: moving, yet restrained, angry yet balanced -- and written with the kind of elegance found all too rarely in fiction these days. The book's narrator is nothing less than Death itself, regaling us with a remarkable tale of book burnings, treachery and theft. The book never forgets the primary purpose of compelling the reader's attention, yet which nevertheless is able to impart a cogent message about the importance of words, particularly in those societies which regard the word as dangerous (the book is set during the Nazi regime, but this message is all too relevant in many places in the world today).

Nine-year-old Liesel lives with her foster family on Himmel Street during the dark days of the Third Reich. Her Communist parents have been transported to a concentration camp, and during the funeral for her brother, she manages to steal a macabre book: it is, in fact, a gravediggers’ instruction manual. This is the first of many books which will pass through her hands as the carnage of the Second World War begins to hungrily claim lives. Both Liesel and her fellow inhabitants of Himmel Street will find themselves changed by both words on the printed page and the horrendous events happening around them.

Despite its grim narrator, The Book Thief is, in fact, a life-affirming book, celebrating the power of words and their ability to provide sustenance to the soul. Interestingly, the Second World War setting of the novel does not limit its relevance: in the 20th century, totalitarian censorship throughout the world is as keen as ever at suppressing books (notably in countries where the suppression of human beings is also par for the course) and that other assault on words represented by the increasing dumbing-down of Western society as cheap celebrity replaces the appeal of books for many people, ensures that the message of Marcus Zusak’s book could not be more timely. It is, in fact, required reading -- or should be in any civilised country. --Barry Forshaw


Customer Reviews:   Read 340 more reviews...

4 out of 5 stars Average story but very original format.   January 2, 2009
While I enjoyed this novel I felt that beyond its unique structure it was not as brilliant as previous reviewers. The narrator is the Grim Reaper(Death) and he tells us who dies and the endings before telling us the details of the story, a quirky aspect I enjoyed. It is very accessible with short snappy chapters, an interesting look at ordinary decent Germans during WW2 and for a book which addresses the holocaust is not overly sentimental like most novels dealing with the issue. I would recommend without question but don't expect to be reading your all time favorite.


5 out of 5 stars An endearing tale...   January 2, 2009
The book thief is a beautiful story, you are drawn into little Leisel's life with her Mama and Papa. Her love of books and her new family grows as she does. The narration by death of this girls life is sometimes sad, funny and always touching.
A must read book!



5 out of 5 stars An utterly amazing book - one of the best   December 31, 2008
I was a bit sceptical of this book at first and thought of it to be very unsettling but in the end it became my favourite of the many I have read. In some parts I laughed and in others I weeped but it came out tops overall.

The book is narrated by Death who comments a lot in the book and expains in a cold and sometimes warm heart what he is doing and what is happening. Leisel is a young german girl who has had a traumatic life and, after witnessing her own brother's death, is sent to a foster family clutching a book, "The grave digger's manual" she found in the snow in her hand. It starts off with her character being a weak little girl but then shows how the Nazi influenced germany shapes her life and she flourishes into a strong willed young lady with a loving family and friends and a passionate love for books. Her foster family then take on a jew named Max and hide him in the basement. Now all hell breaks loose as her foster father is seen passing bread to the marching jews in the street. As Max is a constant threat and danger to their lives, Liesel loves him as a brother and shares her love for books with him as they go on a terrifing journey through world war 2. The ending resulted in many tears as it has an awful and then happy outcome but that was expected really.
The book opens your eyes to the germans' view points during the war and how most of them strongly dissagread with everything but could not stop it in fear of losing their's, and other's, lives. A heart-breaking yet incredible books that is definately 1st in my Top Ten list.

Highly recommended.



3 out of 5 stars Disappointing waste of a story   December 29, 2008
 1 out of 1 found this review helpful

Disappointing; I expected more but, for me, The Book Thief failed to deliver any lasting impact.

The story covers a few formative years in the life of Liesel, a young, orphaned, German girl growing into her early teens through the Second World War in a town near Munich and not far from Dachau. It chronicles a series of incidents that depict growing relationships in extraordinary circumstances, as the war takes its toll on the everyday life of a provincial town and its citizens.

Liesel's scrapes with Rudy, the young schoolboy classmate next door, for example, and her slow-to-emerge love for her working-class foster family and their secret Jewish hideaway show love and true friendship. There are some wonderfully evocative passages, particularly between Liesel and Rudy, that capture the essence of two young children living every dangerous moment together, prepared to fight to defend each other against older bullies and Hitler youth, and walking home together at the end of every day. Liesel is the eponymous thief, fuelling her yearning to read by acquiring a handful of books by various means.

Perhaps life in such circumstances has to be lived on the surface if you want to survive, it is, after all, at those times when deeper emotions are allowed by the characters to take them over that the greatest danger emerges.

This bold book presents its story in brave fashion, with theatrical asides breaking into the staccato chapters to maintain the high tempo. However, this simple series of events through time, narrated by Death as a character with a strangely human presence, fails to make any real point.

Little is made of the opportunity to explore the tensions felt by ordinary folk as anti-Semitism takes hold of a population. Is Liesel's Papa the only person in Germany to have doubts about a policy of such persecution? Or is it only when it is applied to his personal Jew, the one he has accepted responsibility for, that such horrors become too much to bear? And what of using the more susceptible minds against those who might ask awkward questions, employing the younger generation to pressurize and, in extremis, inform upon their parents, an approach repeated in the ghetto where Jew was forced to inform upon Jew. Such events are ignored in favour of a simpler, sentimental tale which lacks any real punch.

It suffers badly as a result, is a hundred and fifty pages too long and, ultimately, boring.



1 out of 5 stars A hugely disappointing read.   December 29, 2008
 1 out of 3 found this review helpful

During the summer I saw so many people with this novel and became interested in reading it for myself. A quick look at the back and I thought it sounded like an innovative take on a period of history which has understandably been the subject of so many well-told stories. I found the idea of death narrating particularly intriguing and so I settled down with my copy full of expectation. How disappointed I was!

I very quickly became annoyed with the voice of the narrator. It seemed stilted to me and it sapped my interest in the story. As other reviewers have pointed out this story could have given us a genuine insight into Nazi Germany from the point of view of an ordinary citizen, an ordinary family. Unfortunately I found it impossible to build up any interest in the characters as the author provides us with SO much unnecessary detail. I understand the wish to build up our understanding of the characters but this could have been done with much less detail about the chosen key events.

I found that at about 550 pages this book is simply too long and could (and should) have been greatly reduced. I hate to give up on a book and so I soldiered on with this one....finally finishing after about two months because I took a number of breaks. Each time I picked it up again I found that I had forgotten what had happened (in truth usually not very much) in the previous chapters. Never a good sign. I did find the ending well-written and slightly moving but that's not really enough of a reward after such a long, difficult slog.


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