La Petite Américaine's Reviews > The Book Thief

The Book Thief by Markus Zusak
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did not like it
bookshelves: worst-garbage-i-ve-ever-read, sucked, i-want-my-money-back, rants

** spoiler alert ** UPDATE: AUG 26, 2016: This review has been here 8 years, has 18 pages of 854 comments and 764 likes. There's no outrage for you to add in the comments section that hasn't already been addressed.
If you want to talk about the book, or why you liked it, or anything else, feel free.

UPDATE: FEB 17, 2014: I wrote this review 4 years ago on a foreign keyboad, so I'm well aware that I spelled Chekhov's name wrong. I'm not going to fix it, so please don't drive my review further up in the rankings by commenting on the misspelling. You're very dear, but I know his name is Anton and not Antonin. On that same note, you don't need to add comments telling me that I didn't like the book because I "don't know how to read" and "don't understand metaphors." I actually have an M.A. in in English Lit, so I do know how to read -- much better than you do, in fact. Now quit bothering me before I go get my PhD and then really turn into a credential-touting ass.

UPDATE: JULY 10, 2013: To all jr. high students who find themselves grossly offended by my review: please remember that every time you leave a comment here, you push my review up even higher in the rankings. Please save us both time and energy by not commenting. Thnx.

This was the biggest piece of garbage I've ever read after The Kite Runner. Just as with The Kite Runner, I'm (somewhat) shocked that this book is a bestseller and has been given awards, chewed up and swallowed by the literary masses and regarded as greatness. Riiiight.

The whole thing can be summed up as the story of a girl who sometimes steals books coming of age during the Holocaust. Throw in the snarky narration by Death (nifty trick except that it doesn't work), a few half-assed drawings of birdies and swastikas, senseless and often laughable prose that sounds like it was pulled from the "poetry" journal of a self-important 15 year-old, and a cast of characters that throughout are like watching cardboard cutouts walking around VERY SLOWLY, and that's the novel.

Here are some humble observations.

First, chances are that you, Mr. Zusak, are not Antonin Chekhov. You are, therefore, incapable of properly describing the weather for use as a literary device, and you end up sounding like an asshole. Don't believe me?

"I like a chocolate-colored sky. Dark, dark chocolate." Really? Do you, now?

"The sky was dripping. Like a tap that a child has tried it’s hardest to turn off but hasn’t quite managed.” Really?? Wow. Next you'll tell me that the rain was like a shower. I'm moved.

"Oh, how the clouds stumbled in and assembled stupidly in the sky. Great obese clouds." Yes. Stupid, obese clouds! They need an education and a healthy diet!

Next, chances are that you, Mr. Zusak, are not William Styron or any one of the other small handful of authors that can get away with Holocaust fiction. They've done their research, had some inkling of writing ability, and were able to tell fascinating stories. You invented a fake town in Germany (probably so you didn't have to do any research) and told a long-winded and poorly-written story, and in 500+ pages you couldn't even make it to 1945, so you sloppily dropped off and wrapped it up in 1943. What's the point of writing historical fiction if you can't even stay within the basic confines of that hisotrical event? For me, this does nothing more than trivialize the mass murder of over 6 million people. Maybe that's why a 30 year-old Australian shouldn't write about the Holocaust. But that's just me. Moving on.

But what really makes this book expensive toilet paper is the bad writing which is to be found not just in bizarre descriptions of the weather, but really on every page. Some personal favorites?

"The breakfast colored sun."

"Somewhere inside her were the souls of words."

"The oldened young man." WTF?!!?

"He crawled to a disfigured figure."

"Her words were motionless."

"It smelled like friendship." (Remind me to sniff my friends next time I see them.)

"A multitude of words and sentences were at her fingertips." (HUH?)

"Pinecones littered the ground like cookies."

Sigh.

All of this is quite funny coming from a book where the main character supposedly learns the importance of words. Further, I love that the protagonist comes to the conclusion that Hitler "would be nothing without words." Really? REALLY? Would Hitler be nothing without WORDS? What about self-loathing, misplaced blame and hatred, an ideology, xenophobia, charisma, an army, and a pride-injured nation willing to listen? Don't those count for something??

The shit-storm comes to an end when a bomb lands on our fictional town, wiping out everyone save for the sometimes book-thief main character. Of course. Because weak writers who don't know how to end their story just kill everyone off for a clean break and some nice emotional manipulation. Written for maximum tear-jerking effect, our main character spews out some great lines when she sees the death and destruction around her:

To her dead mother, "God damn it, you were so beautiful."

To her dead best friend as she shakes him, "Wake up! I love you! Wake up!" (Didn't I see the same thing in that movie My Girl?)

Then she profoundly notes that her dead father "...was a man with silver eyes, not dead ones."

And this kind of angsty adolescent prose just never ended! It went on and on to form the one long-ass, senseless, disjointed story.

But that's ok. Take it all the junk, give it a quirky narrator, an obscure and mysterious title, throw in a Jew on the run from Nazis who likes to draw silly pictures of birds and swastikas, and market it all as Holocaust lit. Ahh, the packaging of bullshit makes for such a sweet best seller.

Swallow it down, America. Put it on the shelf next to The Kite Runner. You love this. You live for this.

SUCKED.
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Reading Progress

July 24, 2008 – Shelved
May 11, 2010 – Started Reading
May 12, 2010 – Shelved as: worst-garbage-i-ve-ever-read
May 12, 2010 – Shelved as: sucked
May 12, 2010 – Shelved as: i-want-my-money-back
May 12, 2010 – Finished Reading
March 21, 2012 – Shelved as: rants

Comments Showing 51-100 of 1,263 (1263 new)


message 51: by Lazyreader (new)

Lazyreader I thank you for your review! I cannot describe better the stupidity and plain ignorance of the book and the writing style of the author. Thank you!


Sharon Great review! I agree completely, but I'm not as funny as you! I did enjoy thw Kite Runner, however, and the Potato Peel Society. However, I'll go an dread your reviews of same and see if you can make me change my mind!


message 53: by Jason (new) - rated it 1 star

Jason This is probably the best book review I've ever read--sensible, accurate, AND funny. Cheers!


Sherry I was listening to this audiobook and I just couldn't get into it. Your review sums it all up perfectly.

I did like Guernsey, though it was a silly little book. I will definitely have to check your review on that one.

Thanks for your honesty and your humor!


message 55: by Carlos (new)

Carlos Alonso-Niemeyer Brutal honesty backed up by facts and presented with eloquent pugnacious detail, Petit you are to die for.

Long live Petit...!

I am reading the book "the man who loved books" about a real book thief. Maybe that book will wash the unsavory taste of your recent disappointment


La Petite Américaine Wow, Carlos! I love it, thank you!!


Debbie Hanna Nicely said!


Alaina Although I completely disagree with your opinions on both this book and The Kite Runner, your review made me laugh.
Personally, I quite enjoyed the author's descriptions. I found them quite artistic :]


Renee Just gotta say. For someone who wants respect you don't give... ANY? But hey, that's life... Unfair. Since, I've written a million things about how much I loved this book I'm not going to waste my time writing another in depth response. I get the feeling you'll cast my words aside anyways. So just one thing. Try being a little more considerate, and that's a life lesson. Realize I haven't bashed your review? Hmm, wonder why.


message 62: by Ian (new)

Ian La Petite -- have you learned your life lesson ... ???


message 63: by Mish (new) - rated it 4 stars

Mish Well, I am surprised at the strength of feeling against this book. I thoroughly enjoyed and thought that the characters were very well developed. I had a similar adverse reaction to the "The Camel Club" and in comparison the characterisation in Book Thief are vibrant and fully formed. I liked all the bells and whistles - it kept me interested and provided an interesting counterpoint to the grim subject. It made the horrors and fragility of life seem all the more poignant. I particularly liked the relationship between Liesel and Rudy. His running round the track as Jesse Owens was a brilliant stroke. It seemed to sum up the simplicity of childhood. I was also very moved by the father and he reminded me of Atticus Finch (To kill a mockingbird) in his attempts to do the right thing in spite of the temptations all around him to do the contrary. I could go on about the characters - I got so much out of them and out of the little stories that interweaved. You really ought to read more crappy books to realise how good this one is.


La Petite Américaine Lol! Love it :) I will search for more crap as time allows. I didn't think it could get worse than this one, but I'll be on the lookout! :)


message 65: by Mish (new) - rated it 4 stars

Mish You ought to try The Camel Club - I challenge you to read the whole thing without grimacing.


La Petite Américaine I'll read it next!


message 67: by Sharon (new)

Sharon Totally agree, and the Kite Runner ditto.


message 68: by Noel (new) - rated it 5 stars

Noel I could comment on soo many things! one thing that specifically stuck out was Hitler "would be nothing without words." Really? REALLY? Would Hitler be nothing without WORDS? What about self-loathing, misplaced blame and hatred, an ideology, xenophobia, charisma, an army, and a pride-injured nation willing to listen? Don't those count for something??
....Hitler got where he did because he was an excellent speaker. yeah he did have a big army and all that crap but he never would have gotten that far without his eloquent speeking skills. He never would have gotten his army and made people believe the way that he did is he hadnt been very persuasive. I mean seriously, if he hadnt gotten on anybody's "good side" then everyone could ahve easily turned against him. Can you imagine if his army of like a billion nazis all turned and shot him instead of all the innocent Jews and all those other people


message 69: by Scott (new) - rated it 1 star

Scott Williams Oh my God, I can't believe there is someone who hated this pretentious bullshit as much as me. I was actually murderously enraged when I finished this (towards the author) and 6 months later I am finally starting to calm down!


message 70: by Ally (new) - rated it 3 stars

Ally I must admit I am not a fan either and while I agree with many points you have made I do have one disagreement:

"What's the point of writing historical fiction if you can't even stay within the basic confines of that hisotrical event? "

I don't think The Book Thief was meant to be all about the Holocaust or all about 'The Book Thief'. It was a journey of a girl who was a German citizen during the Nazi rule, in a town where disagreement meant death, I think this allows a little poetic licence. Although, I do agree it should have been set in an actual town not a fictional one. These people were powerless against the Nazi regime while not being attacked directly by it, and I felt like the author captured than decently.

Once I finish reading (and that took forever), other than feeling underwhelmed I didn't come away angry that the Holocaust hadn't been touched on accurately but instead that all I had read about was a girl finally getting a clue. I had wasted my time reading about a childhood story I couldn't relate to.

If the author fails at anything it is the cohesion and balance of the two things he is trying to write about, Nazi German from a German perspective and the story of the adolescence's of a young girl. He should have picked one or the other.


Rocky La Petite Américaine wrote: "The argument the author makes -- that words alone hold such power -- just seems like bogus garbage to me. By his reasoning, without words, we'd all be useless. Take that same reasonign and apply i..."

Really? Deaf people communicate through sign language, which they interpret into words that have meaning. If words are not powerful, why are you reading books?


Cheryl Wow! That is intense mega book-rage! You are so right!


message 73: by [deleted user] (new)

How incisive your term, "the literary masses."


message 74: by Cameron (new)

Cameron How many novels have you written?


message 75: by Em (new) - rated it 5 stars

Em Firstly, this book made me cry.
Secondly, It's my favourite book.
Thirdly, I've met Markus Zusak's father... on Mt. Kosciusko. He told me that his son wrote the book based on a true story. The character Rudy is based on Zusak's father (even though he dies), and Liesel based on his mother. So, I don't think you can say Zusak knew nothing about the holocaust.
This book is different from most holocaust books cos it's not really based on the Jews. Doesn’t mean he can’t make a good story out of it.
I read this when I was 11. And read it again after that.


message 76: by Chris (new) - rated it 1 star

Chris You had me at "This was the biggest piece of garbage I've ever read, after The Kite Runner." Unfortunately, I now want to finish the "expensive toilet paper" just to pick out more of the bad writing "gems." Thanks!


message 77: by Mish (last edited Mar 08, 2012 12:40PM) (new) - rated it 4 stars

Mish Scott wrote: "Oh my God, I can't believe there is someone who hated this pretentious bullshit as much as me. I was actually murderously enraged when I finished this (towards the author) and 6 months later I am ..."

A book can make you murderously enraged? And can be still bugging you 6 months after putting it down? Wow, that is powerful writing!

How did you manage to overcome such strong feelings?


message 78: by Mish (new) - rated it 4 stars

Mish Alice wrote: "I must admit I am not a fan either and while I agree with many points you have made I do have one disagreement:

"What's the point of writing historical fiction if you can't even stay within the ba..."


As someone else has pointed out "Nah, I do what I want" There's no SHOULD about a novel - the author can do what they like - you can only respond (or not) - you can't demand the author write a story a certain way - it wouldn't be their story then.


message 79: by Mish (new) - rated it 4 stars

Mish Chris wrote: "You had me at "This was the biggest piece of garbage I've ever read, after The Kite Runner." Unfortunately, I now want to finish the "expensive toilet paper" just to pick out more of the bad writin..."

You clearly have too much time on your hands. If you don't like a book, don't read it. There's so many more out there waiting for you.


message 80: by Cameron (new)

Cameron To Mish: I like you!


La Petite Américaine Jesus....is this still going on?


Fernanda I really liked the book but I can't help it but love your review! It's been a while since I read it, and I think this is still going on because you made a big impact with your words, for good or bad.

Since I read it in Spanish, I don't remember those messy and pointless descriptions, maybe the translator made it a favor. Or I just didn't pay attention at all.

And this comment made me laugh a lot
"If you don't like a book, don't read it. There's so many more out there waiting for you. "

I might be weird but I don't know if I like a book if I don't read it.


La Petite Américaine Thanks, Fernanda. :)


message 84: by Zar (new) - rated it 5 stars

Zar i think this book had an aesthetic value that some people just don't get. While everyone has a ''right'' to their opinions i can't help but very saddened by yours. but your review was comical. haha.


message 85: by Mish (new) - rated it 4 stars

Mish Fernanda wrote: "I really liked the book but I can't help it but love your review! It's been a while since I read it, and I think this is still going on because you made a big impact with your words, for good or ba..."

Fernanda, do you always finish books? I think you know whether you like a book without having to read it to the end. I have given up on a book after the first page.


Charlene Lol. I completely loved the book but...geez, you really did made a point! Haha.


Fatima Al Shamasi For the Hitler and words part, maybe I'm exploring it shallowly, but maybe it makes sense how Hitler would be nothing without words. How else would he manipulate the minds of thousands of people? Words. Your words about the book devestated me (a strong feeling coming from words, no?). I'm a beginner debator. Not off to a good start.


message 88: by Angela (last edited Jul 07, 2012 07:31AM) (new) - rated it 5 stars

Angela Fatema I to loved this book.This book was beautiful to me and to others I know. Petite has her ways and her reviews are entertaining, she brings a different side, which I can appreciate, but not always have to agree with. I also do not like to debate I save my energy for other things.
Keep in mind this book is Teen Fiction, a great book for teenagers to read in between vampires, boys, girls, kissing, shopping, etc etc etc.


message 89: by LL (new) - rated it 4 stars

LL I understand not liking a book. This kind of rant isn't very productive though. It leaves me scratching my head over why you seem so angry. This book helps put a human face on one of the saddest and bloodiest eras of human history, kindling remembrance as actual survivors become fewer and fewer. You may have a problem with some of the aesthetic choices, but there's no need to be so vicious about it, is there?


message 90: by LL (new) - rated it 4 stars

LL Also, while the mass appeal of this book may be a strike against it in some minds, I honesly believe that any work of fiction, no matter how flawed, that engenders compassion and awareness among its readers has some value. I have German friends who read this book and, although some had misgivings about the author's style, they appreciated that kind, non-Nazi, average German characters were given faces and voices that reached such a massive audience. They also appreciated that an oft-overlooked chapter of WWII (the bombing of civilians in German cities) was recognized. So while you certainly have a right to your opinion, calling this book "steaming dog shit" is completely vitriolic and unnecessary.


La Petite Américaine (gotta love Americans acting as the moral police on the web.)


message 93: by LL (last edited Nov 18, 2012 07:32PM) (new) - rated it 4 stars

LL I can only assume the reason you posted this rant is because you wanted to get a reaction from people, so I don't get why you seem so annoyed that I disagree with you. Oh well, I said my piece. I do happen to agree with your first comment about there being more accurate ways to put a human face on WWII and the Holocaust - but The Book Thief is a mass market paperback that's much more accessible, and a good read at that. That's got to count for something.


message 94: by La Petite Américaine (last edited Aug 19, 2012 06:10PM) (new) - rated it 1 star

La Petite Américaine I'm not annoyed that you disagree with me. I couldn't care less. I am, however, annoyed, that you keep posting here while I'm trying to get work done.

So, if a book is mass produced, it's got to count for something? Mein Kampf was a mass produced paperback. Does that count for something, too?


message 95: by LL (new) - rated it 4 stars

LL Sheesh. Here's a tip for you: If you don't want people commenting on your reviews, then don't post them. If you want to post them anyway, then don't respond when people comment. Get your work done instead. Simple, right? I'd take the Mein Kampf bait, but it's clear that you're incapable of having any kind of civil conversation, so I'm done. (Oh, one more tip: Don't call someone retarded just because they disagree with you about an inflammatory book review that you voluntarily posted on the Internet. You don't have to be the American morality police to know that's just poor form.)


La Petite Américaine Laura Lee wrote: "Sheesh. Here's a tip for you: If you don't want people commenting on your reviews, then don't post them. "

Uh. Ok. I won't then. Thanks for the suggestion.

Heehee. You'll LOVE my reviews of Brave Girl Eating and The Kite Runner. I'm sure you'll be back for more.


message 97: by Diane (new) - rated it 1 star

Diane YES, YES, YES!


message 99: by Kris (new)

Kris Pitzler HA!


Sarahle Einav “When a man uses profanity to support an argument, it indicates that either the man or the argument is weak - probably both” How do u expect ppl to even take ur review into account????


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