Shared Flashcard Set

Details

Analysis for The Book Thief
English Final
66
Other
10th Grade
12/19/2012

Additional Other Flashcards

 


 

Cards

Term
Analysis- Death utilizes the literary device foreshadowing to avoid horrendous occurrences while narrating The Book Thief written by Markus Zusak. In doing so Death reveals his sensitivity to the subject of the appalling acts humans commit. You can determine that Death finds these behaviors abysmal by how sudden the excerpts are in the novel. When something is misfortunate Death quickly puts forth an excerpt and doesn't dwell on the topic as if he yearns to get it over with as quickly as possible. He does this because, while claiming not to be, Death is bothered by death and foreshadowing is his way to circumvent going into detail. He states these excerpts in multiple ways. Some will be indirectly while in others you can sense his opinion, and sometimes you’ll catch a glimpse of his emotions or he’ll be straight forward.
Definition
Term


Indirect Foreshadowing

Definition
Term
“The time had come for one.” Page 19
Definition
Term
 “Of those ten, six were stolen, one showed up at the kitchen table, two were made for her by a hidden Jew, and one was delivered by a soft, yellow-dressed afternoon.” Page 30
Definition
Term
 “She saw it but didn’t realize until later, when all the stories came together.” Page 71
Definition
Term
 “Trust me though, the words were on their way, and when they arrived Liesel would hold them in her like the clouds, and she would wring them out like the rain.” Page 80
Definition
Term
 “Like most misery, it began with apparent happiness.” Page 84
Definition
Term
“ She was just waiting for the right moment.” Page 132
Definition
Term
“Also, it’s important to the story.” Page 138
Definition
Term
“You hide a Jew. You pay. Somehow or other, you must.” Page 258
Definition
Term
“Perhaps it was because so much more had happened by the time she wrote her story in the basement.” Page 258
Definition
Term
 “In the end, she had to give it to him.” Page 267
Definition
Term
 “A Triple-Tiered problem. 1. Tommy Mûller’s ears. 2. Franz Deutscher- the irate Hitler Youth Leader. 3. Rudy’s inability to stay out of things.” Page 268
Definition
Term
“Originally, Max had intended to write his own story.” Page 277
Definition
Term
“Today Rudy was all out of laughter and lies.” Page 282
Definition
Term
 “The hands of Frau Holtzapfel. The parade of Jews.” Page 385
Definition
Term
“He nearly went completely unnoticed.” Page 293
Definition
Term
“With no further words, Liesel followed him and successfully avoided Rudy’s tormentor-straight into the path of another.” Page 300
Definition
Term
“It brought the war closer to Himmel Street, and it dragged me along for the ride.” Page 308
Definition
Term
“The bombs were coming- so was I.” page 335
Definition
Term
 “But it was bombing carpet. Make no mistake.” Page 358
Definition
Term
 “That makes two weeks, she would later write in the basement. Two weeks to change the world, and fourteen days to ruin it.” Page 388
Definition
Term
“Rudy Steiner wasn’t going anywhere.” Page 411
Definition
Term
“The coat men knew who was third.” Page 415
Definition
Term
“The contents of Rudy’s bag: Six stale pieces of bread, broken into quarters.” Page 439
Definition
Term
“One seat, two men, a short argument, and me.” Page 464
Definition
Term
“I was on my way to Molching for one more.” Page 488
Definition
Term
“But her story lasts for six.” Page 493
Definition
Term
“I felt them on my hands as I stood outside Frau Diller’s.
Definition
Term
“Until the ninety-eight day.” Page 500
Definition
Term
“She was saying goodbye, and she didn’t even know it.” Page 518

Definition
Term

 

Opinionated Foreshadowing

Definition
Term
 “He had already cheated me in one world war, and would later be put into another (as a perverse kind of reward) where he would somehow manage to avoid me again.” Page 34
Definition
Term
“He didn’t deserve to die the way he did.” Page 241
Definition
Term
 “You do not help Jews on the street. Your basement should not be hiding one.” Page 416
Definition
Term

 

Emotional Foreshadowing

Definition
Term
“As usual I collected humans. I was tired. And the year wasn’t even halfway over yet.” Page 338
Definition
Term
“Usually my curiosity leads to the dreaded witnessing of some kind of human outcry, but on this occasion, I have to say that although it broke my heart, I was, and still am, glad I was there.” Page 533
Definition
Term
“Often, I wonder what page she was up to when I walked down Himmel street in the dripping-tap rain, five nights later.” Page 528
Definition
Term
“I am in all truthfulness attempting to be cheerful about this whole topic, though most people find themselves hindered in believing me, no matter my protestations.” Page 3
Definition
Term
 “I wonder what she was reading when the first bomb dropped from the rib cage of a plane.” Page 528
Definition
Term
 “It kills me sometimes, how people died.” Page 464
Definition
Term

 

Direct Foreshadowing

Definition
Term
“I saw the book thief three times.” Page 5
Definition
Term
 “The book thief had struck for the first time- the beginning of an illustrious career.” Page 29
Definition
Term
 “One of them, the infamous Rudy, would soon become Liesel’s best friend, and later, her partner and sometime catalyst in crime.” Page 47
Definition
Term
 “Rudy understood nothing, and that night was the prelude of things to come.” Page 61
Definition
Term
 “It would provide her with a venue for continued book thievery.” Page 83
Definition
Term
 “It ended a few weeks later.” Page 90
Definition
Term
 “They didn’t make it that far.” Page 118
Definition
Term
“Its journey began on the way home, the night of the fire.” Page 125
Definition
Term
“We’ll give him seven months. Then we’ll come for him.” Page 128
Definition
Term
 “Certainly something of great magnitude was coming toward 33 Himmel Street, to which Liesel was currently oblivious.” Page 129
Definition
Term
“He would bring it to her in the early hours of morning, before re-treating down the concrete steps to what he now like to call home.”
Definition
Term
 “He’d have been glad to witness her kissing his dusty, bomb-hit lips.” Page 242
Definition
Term
 “In the basement, just over two years later, Liesel ached sometime to go next door and see him, even if she was writing in the early hours of morning.” Page 271
Definition
Term
 “It took him approximately five months to turn his statement into a true one.” Page 275
Definition
Term
“So hard that he would never ask her lips again and go to his grave without them. “ Page 303
Definition
Term
 “He was wrong.” Page 298
Definition
Term
“Max would not wake up. For eight more days.” Page 331
Definition
Term
 “The coat men wanted Rudy.” Page 403
Definition
Term
“And just maybe, he would have lived.” Page 411
Definition
Term
“He would be killed by Hans Hubermann’s seat.” Page 432
Definition
Term
“Only one person survived.” Page 498g
Definition
Term
“Oh, and one more thing. He would die with his mouth open.” Page 463
Definition
Term
Zusak, Markus. The Book Thief. New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 2006. Print.
Definition
Supporting users have an ad free experience!