They can dance and talk back to the screen. They can skip their appointment with the shrink that week. Carr went on to become an interior designer in Southern California.
She was born in Chicago in Her mother was a vaudeville actress, and her father was a musician and orchestra leader. Her family moved to the San Fernando Valley when she was a child. Ilsa Hermann is the wife of the mayor of Molching. She introduces Liesel to her library. She spits on their door every time she walks past. He never returns from the war. Hans Hubermann, Jr. He is a Nazi Party member who believes his father is a coward for not supporting Hitler.
She is a live-in housemaid for a wealthy Munich family. Joel Kleinmann is a Jewish shopkeeper whose store door is defaced, then repainted by Hans Hubermann.
Walter helps Max hide from the Nazis before he goes to the Hubermann home. Thomas Mamer is a grocer who calls for police when Rudy steals the largest potato. Teacher Herr Link defends Rudy. Her husband was taken away for being a communist and Paula awaits the same fate. Harald Mollenhauer is a neighborhood boy and a leader in the Himmel street soccer games. He has chronic ear infections, twitches a lot and is not athletically inclined.
Pfiffikus is an old man who likes to whistle. The children taunt him and he taunts them back. He makes fun of her for not being able to read, and Liesel beats him up. Hans Hubermann is a member of his unit.
He owns a tailor shop and is a member of the Nazi Party but does not hate Jews. As she matures, Liesel realizes that most everyone in her life has experienced loss and pain, and she reevaluates people she initially considered weak, such as Ilsa Hermann , with this new understanding.
Even though she is a child, Liesel questions the status quo, and creates a moral system for herself rather than blindly following what society dictates.
She is motivated both by a strong sense of guilt and a strong ideal of justice. The power of language is a major theme for Liesel, especially as she matures and becomes a more critical thinker. Liesel comes to understand that language can be both a dangerous weapon of control, as with the Nazi propaganda, and a gift that enables her to broaden her view of the world. Through the books she steals, reads, and writes, she evolves from a powerless character to a powerful character who deeply empathizes with the voiceless.
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