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  1. Analysis. Rudy sets up lines of dominoes with his siblings while his parents talk to the Gestapo in the next room. When he hears the voices get louder Rudy lights a candle and leans against the door, listening. He realizes the Gestapo are here to take him to an elite Nazi school because of his good grades and athletic skill.

  2. An old man, struggling to keep up, falls repeatedly in the street. Hans takes a piece of bread from his paint can and offers it to the man. The man falls to his knees and embraces Hans’s feet in thanks, but before he can eat the bread a soldier arrives and begins whipping the man, then Hans. As the procession moves on, witnesses call Hans a ...

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    • Books and Writing
    • Darkness
    • Stealing

    Books and writing figure prominently in the novel, and several characters’ lives are changed or affected in some way by one or the other. In fact, three lives are saved through books or writing. Max ironically receives the fake identity card that helps him survive in a copy of MKPF, and then he reads the book for cover as he travels to Molching. Ha...

    At the beginning of the book, Death observes that people generally only notice color at dawn and dusk—in other words, the end and beginning of darkness. Darkness, symbolizing ignorance and despair, figures prominently throughout the book, from the dark basement of the Hubermanns where Liesel learns to read, bringing the light of knowledge into the ...

    The act of stealing appears repeatedly in the novel, beginning with Liesel taking the book dropped by the gravedigger right at the start. As the novel progresses, Liesel as well as others begin stealing more regularly. Liesel and Rudy join a band of boys who frequently take apples and vegetables from a nearby orchard. They also cause a delivery boy...

  4. This quote from The Book Thief shows metaphor as the figurative language when death was describing the nightmare Liesel was having. She did have it easy compared to Max Vandenberg. Certainly, her brother practically died in her arms. Her mother abandoned her. But anything was better than being a Jew.

  5. Apr 12, 2011 · He’d have cried and turned and smiled if only he could have seen the book thief on her hands and knees, next to his decimated body. He’d have been glad to witness her kissing his dusty, bomb-hit lips. So Rudy dies in a bomb blast, I presume. Even when describing ugly moments, Zusak is quick to use kind of beautiful imagery.

  6. Words and Language Theme Analysis. LitCharts assigns a color and icon to each theme in The Book Thief, which you can use to track the themes throughout the work. Markus Zusak constantly reminds the reader of the importance of language through his writing style. The disjointed narration, postmodern style (the starred, bold-faced interjections ...

  7. Expert Answers. In The Book Thief, the motif of darkness recurs throughout the whole novel. For the most part, the associations of darkness are negative, and include ignorance, secrecy and ...

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