Why does liesel hide the gravediggers handbook
Liesel begins to associate the sound of Hans's accordion with safety. She hides The Grave Digger's Handbook underneath her mattress. For her, the book signifies the last time she saw her mother and her brother. School is a struggle, because Liesel cannot read or write. She is placed with the younger children and feels ashamed. They meet from 3 to 5 on Wednesdays and Saturdays and learn skills like bandage rolling, sewing, and marching, and perform their heil Hitlers.
Liesel goes with Rosa to pick up and deliver the wealthy families' washing and ironing. Rosa doesn't like her customers and berates them to Liesel.
She particularly dislikes the mayor and his wife, who live at 8 Grande Strasse. Discuss how they demonstrate courage throughout the novel. Liesel Meminger lived to be an old woman. Death says that he would like to tell the book thief about beauty and brutality, but those are things that she had lived. How does her life represent beauty in the wake of brutality?
The Book Thief Marcus Zusak. Age Level :. Genre :. Published :. Like 0. Dislike 0. The train stops for track repairs, and Liesel's mother exits the train with Werner in her arms. Liesel follows, as do the two guards who discuss what to do. They drop the three of them off at the next township, where Werner is buried two days later by a pair of gravediggers, one of whom is a young apprentice.
She and her mother continue their journey to Munich, where they say good-bye. Liesel does not want to get out of the car. Eventually, Hans is able to remove her from the car, quietly holding her hand. It also illustrates how early on Liesel is aware of the power of words, particularly Hitler's.
Already she understands the effect that words can have on people, despite that fact that she can neither read nor write.
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