The Book Thief: A Story of Courage in WWII Germany
In February 1938, a voice representing Death tells about how the young Liesel Meminger has piqued his interest. Liesel is traveling with her mother and younger brother on a train. On the way, her brother dies and is buried next to the tracks. Liesel steals her first book, titled The Grave Digger’s Handbook, when it falls out of the gravedigger’s pocket. Liesel is then brought to her new home, where she meets her new foster parents, Rosa Hubermann and Hans Hubermann. Rudy Steiner, a boy who lives next door, accompanies her on her first day of school. She is unable to read or write, and when Hans, her foster father, realizes that Liesel cannot read, he begins to teach her, using the book that she took from the graveside.
Liesel and Rudy become members of the Hitler Youth movement. While at a Nazi book-burning ceremony, Liesel and Rudy are harassed into throwing books onto the bonfire by Franz, but Liesel is upset to see the books being burned. When the bonfire ends and everyone has left, Liesel, who was still there, grabs a book that has been only singed. She is seen by Ilsa Hermann, the wife of the mayor. When Rosa asks Liesel to take the laundry to the mayor’s house, she realizes that the woman who saw her taking the book is the mayor’s wife. Instead, Ilsa takes her into their library and tells Liesel she can come by anytime and read as much as she’d like. One day Liesel is found reading by the mayor, who not only puts a stop to her visits but dismisses Rosa as their laundress.
During Kristallnacht, Max Vandenburg and his mother, who are Jewish, are told by a friend that only one of them can escape, and Max’s mother forces him to go. Max’s father had saved Hans’ life in World War I, and hence he goes to the Hubermanns’ house, where Rosa and Hans give him shelter. Max initially stays in Liesel’s room while recovering from his trip, and they begin to become friends over their mutual hatred of Hitler. World War II begins, initially making most of the children in Liesel’s neighborhood very happy. Max is moved to the basement so that he can move around more, but it is cold, and Max becomes dangerously ill. Liesel helps Max recover by reading to him books “borrowed” from the mayor’s library with every spare moment.
One day while “borrowing” a book from the mayor’s home, Liesel is followed by Rudy. He discovers the secret of Max, whose name he reads on a journal Max gave to Liesel for Christmas. Rudy guesses that her family is hiding someone, and he swears to never tell anyone.
While working, Hans sees a neighbor and friend named Lehman being taken away by the police because he is a Jew. Hans tries to intervene, telling the officer that Lehman is a good man, but Hans’s name is taken by the soldiers, and he is thrown to the ground. Hans realizes what a mistake he has made since this has made his family visible. He tells the family, and Max realizes he must leave in order to protect them. Hans then receives a telegram that he has been conscripted into the army and must leave immediately.
Within a few days, Hans returns from the front because he was injured by a bomb that hit another of his unit’s truck.
The family is reunited only for a short time. One night the city is bombed by accident, and the air raid sirens fail to go off. Hans, Rosa, and Rudy’s family are killed in the blast. Liesel was spared from the bombing because she fell asleep in the basement while writing in the journal given to her by Max. Rudy begins to tell Liesel that he loves her, but he dies before he can finish the sentence. During this scene, Death is heard speaking again about how he received the souls of the dead. Later she sees a book among the rubble and picks it up. She then sees the mayor and Ilsa drive up. With Ilsa being the only friend she has left, Liesel runs up to her and hugs her.
Two years later, after Germany has fallen to the Allies, Liesel is working in the tailor shop owned by Rudy’s father. Max enters. Overjoyed by his survival and return, she runs to hug him. The final scene is Death speaking again about Liesel’s life and her death at the age of 90, mentioning her family and his apartment in Manhattan with pictures of her past and a portrait.