I've always wanted to read "The Scarlet Letter." So I bought it. It was a very slow and dense read. I'm a firm believer in taking consequences for your actions. Hester Prynne should not have been the only one outcasted for having a child out of wedlock. The man should have been scorned as well, only she wouldn't say who it was. As the story goes on, I have theories on who the baby daddy is. Turns out I was right. Little Pearl wasn't actually born out of wedlock, but Hester was married to Roger Chillingsworth. He allowed for Hester to take the fall for the child. He did not claim his guilt. He is a narcissist. The story really started picking up a little over halfway though the book. At the end, I was glad that the Reverend held hand in hand with Hester and Pearl and the scarlet letter was no more. Hester felt a weight lifted off of her. She could let her hair down and be a woman again. She was burned for no reason, and she allowed it. This shows how feminism has changed over the years, because I wouldn't let anyone blame me for two people's decisions.
I just recently finished "The Book Thief" by Markus Zusak. I had no idea what this novel was going to be about going into it; all I knew was that our 10th grade English class study it. Right off the bat I noticed that our narrator was not your average Joe. The narrator is death. When I realized this I said to myself, "Oh this is going to be good." The novel is all about the Holocaust and it is shown from a German point of view. Leisel Meminger's mother gives her away to a foster German family. On the trip to this new family, Leisel's brother dies. So right from the start death is there. I'm not going to give you a synopsis of it, because I think you should read it for yourself. Just know that a German family hides a Jew in their basement for a while, and death is around every corner. That last line of the novel really got me though..."I am haunted by humans."
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