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Liesel Meminger In The Book Thief

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Just 11 years old and thrown into Nazi, Germany during World War 2, not knowing a single person. This was Liesel Meminger, and this was her situation in a classic novel by Markus Zusak. How did she unconsciously cope? What started with an innocent picking-up, turned into fence jumping and window crawling. Liesel's growing and declining habit of stealing books has an overall domino effect on her life, which is threaded through each page of The Book Thief. In the end, Liesel’s thievery keeps her alive.

The Grave Digger’s Handbook was the first to be in the possession of Liesel Meminger. It was black with silver writing on the cover, found lodged in the snow of a “nameless” (22) town. After the burial of her little brother, Werner, had been cut short and Liesel and her mother would soon again board the train from the cemetery (this time with one less person), Liesel spotted the rectangular …show more content…
This someone being the mayor’s wife, Ilsa Hermann, who Liesel would soon have to come face-to-face with when given the order from her foster mother, Rosa to deliver clean clothes to the upper class of the town. This one command started a relationship between Ilsa and Liesel, when the girl was invited into Ilsa’s library. After Ilsa is brought to firing Rosa, Liesel is frustrated and upset, lashing out at the mayor's wife. While not on good terms with Ilsa, Liesel steals multiple books on different occasions, with the help of her best friend Rudy Steiner. On the first occasion that Liesel steals from Ilsa she officially gets her nickname from Rudy, when he refers to Liesel in his farewell as “book thief” (292). Ilsa, aware of her slightly diminishing book collection, leaves the window open for Liesel to enjoy the library whenever she wishes (despite having used to leave it open while mourning her son’s death), puts out cookies, and at one point a dictionary as well, trying to mend the

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