

The narrator was fine, nothing special, but not a hindrance either. I am not sure if I would recommend this book to everyone. A very dramatic book, which more than once, sent chills through me.

Hannah herself could not admit and own up to what she had done. But then it becomes a comment on how a country.
#The book the reader by bernhard schlink full#
This dysfunctional "kid" (as he is referred to in the book), who even as an adult could not come to terms with his relationship with Hannah, was full of unresolved feelings and emotion too. It seems a simple story of a young boys relationship with an older woman. I never took the time to understand what the second generation German people went through, a completely different perspective. A 15-year-old schoolboy, Michael Berg, is suffering a long bout of hepatitis. The narrator, Michael Berg, tells the story of his teenage affair with a former Nazi prison guard and its aftermath. Being a second generation holocaust survivor from both of my parents, I was raised with the holocaust in my veins, always learning and feeling the emotion of what my parents, their families and friends went through, one horror story after the other. The Reader by Bernhard Schlink and Carol Brown Janeway. Then she took my pail and sent a second wave of water across the walk. She swung her arm, the water sluiced down across the walk and washed the vomit into the gutter. I took the other one, filled it, and followed her through the entryway. When does the difference in social class between Hanna and Michael become most clear and painful Why does Hanna feel uncomfortable. There were two pails standing by the faucet she grabbed one and filled it. Worse than that, it also prompts her to become a prison guard, and destroy the lives of innocent people as well.

I couldn't decide if I liked it or not, however, it continues to pop into my thoughts and haunt me, and that is a sure sign that the book affected me. At what point does the significance of the book's title become clear to you Who is 'The Reader' Are there others in the story with an equally compelling claim to this role 2. Illiteracy is a motif throughout the novel and is always the one factor that seems to offer Hanna the chance to completely ruin her life at every stage of it. When I was finished this book I felt empty.
