So when I read "Sythe", I was not sure I was going to like the dystopian genre. But man I love it. The way that Shusterman kept the important parts of our current era but made them unimportant. For example, all of the big monuments we have now don't mean anything to the characters. I don't have much to say about the novel other than Shusterman is brilliant and I can't wait to get my hands on the next one because a whole new generation is about to be born.
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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