After reading Markus Zusak's The Book Thief, I wanted to read more by this author. I picked up the audio version of I Am the Messenger. This book was equally as lengthy, but much easier to read/listen.
The audio had me laughing aloud in my car on my way to work. It is such twisted humor (how could you laugh through a bank robbery scene?). The "character" that made me laugh most was the discussion of the Doorman--Ed Kennedy's (protagonist's) dog. But this book is not a comedy. It is a mystery and a mission. The descriptive language Zusak uses is beautiful.
This book is not for students younger than high school--language (tons!) and sexual content.
I am definitely a Zusak fan and plan to read other books by this author. Click HERE for author's website. Love the commentary with the photos!
Babbling of an ordinary person about texts I am reading so I can actually remember WHAT I've read.
Showing posts with label Zusak. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Zusak. Show all posts
Tuesday, June 10, 2014
Thursday, March 20, 2014
The Book Thief
I had purchased The Book Thief two summers ago and started reading it in the car while waiting for my girls to get done with cross country practice. Then school happened. Reading too sporatic and disjointed. So I picked the book up again--but I had to reread the first 150 pages.
Wow! Why did I ever stop reading this book?!?!? It is such an awesome story, but the way it is told lifts it to another level. The narrator, Death, tells the story of a young German girl during WWII. Given the timeframe of the setting, the narrator Death, and the sheer length--this novel will not be that uplifting, mindless read I sometimes crave. Students have a renewed interest in the novel since the movie just came out. I am hesitant to recommend this book to my students because I think most will get frustrated. A few of my higher-level, avid readers completed it and loved it.
I am reading another Markus Zusak (brief author info) novel--The Messenger--that absolutely would not be appropriate for junior high students (sexual content and foul language). If I have a student that wants to read this novel, I secure their parents' permission because of the language used (though most of the swearing is uttered in German).
Wow! Why did I ever stop reading this book?!?!? It is such an awesome story, but the way it is told lifts it to another level. The narrator, Death, tells the story of a young German girl during WWII. Given the timeframe of the setting, the narrator Death, and the sheer length--this novel will not be that uplifting, mindless read I sometimes crave. Students have a renewed interest in the novel since the movie just came out. I am hesitant to recommend this book to my students because I think most will get frustrated. A few of my higher-level, avid readers completed it and loved it.
I am reading another Markus Zusak (brief author info) novel--The Messenger--that absolutely would not be appropriate for junior high students (sexual content and foul language). If I have a student that wants to read this novel, I secure their parents' permission because of the language used (though most of the swearing is uttered in German).
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