The Book Thief(75)





There were certainly some rounds to be made that year, from Poland to Russia to Africa and back again. You might argue that I make the rounds no matter what year it is, but sometimes the human race likes to crank things up a little. They increase the production of bodies and their escaping souls. A few bombs usually do the trick. Or some gas chambers, or the chitchat of faraway guns. If none of that finishes proceedings, it at least strips people of their living arrangements, and I witness the homeless everywhere. They often come after me as I wander through the streets of molested cities. They beg me to take them with me, not realizing Im too busy as it is. Your time will come, I convince them, and I try not to look back. At times, I wish I could say something like, Dont you see Ive already got enough on my plate? but I never do. I complain internally as I go about my work, and some years, the souls and bodies dont add up; they multiply.





AN ABRIDGED ROLL CALL FOR 1942





The desperate Jewstheir spirits in my lap as we sat on the roof, next to the steaming chimneys.



The Russian soldierstaking only small amounts of ammunition, relying on the fallen for the rest of it.



The soaked bodies of a French coast beached on the shingle and sand.



I could go on, but Ive decided for now that three examples will suffice. Three examples, if nothing else, will give you the ashen taste in your mouth that defined my existence during that year.



So many humans.



So many colors.



They keep triggering inside me. They harass my memory. I see them tall in their heaps, all mounted on top of each other. There is air like plastic, a horizon like setting glue. There are skies manufactured by people, punctured and leaking, and there are soft, coal-colored clouds, beating like black hearts.



And then.



There is death.



Making his way through all of it.



On the surface: unflappable, unwavering.



Below: unnerved, untied, and undone.



In all honesty (and I know Im complaining excessively now), I was still getting over Stalin, in Russia. The so-called second revolutionthe murder of his own people.



Then came Hitler.



They say that war is deaths best friend, but I must offer you a different point of view on that one. To me, war is like the new boss who expects the impossible. He stands over your shoulder repeating one thing, incessantly: Get it done, get it done. So you work harder. You get the job done. The boss, however, does not thank you. He asks for more.



Often, I try to remember the strewn pieces of beauty I saw in that time as well. I plow through my library of stories.



In fact, I reach for one now.



I believe you know half of it already, and if you come with me, Ill show you the rest. Ill show you the second half of a book thief.



Unknowingly, she awaits a great many things that I alluded to just a minute ago, but she also waits for you.



Shes carrying some snow down to a basement, of all places.



Handfuls of frosty water can make almost anyone smile, but it cannot make them forget.



Here she comes.





THE SNOWMAN





For Liesel Meminger, the early stages of 1942 could be summed up like this:



She became thirteen years of age. Her chest was still flat. She had not yet bled. The young man from her basement was now in her bed.





Q&A

How did Max

Vandenburg end up

in Liesels bed?

He fell.





Opinions varied, but Rosa Hubermann claimed that the seeds were sown at Christmas the previous year.



December 24 had been hungry and cold, but there was a major bonusno lengthy visitations. Hans Junior was simultaneously shooting at Russians and maintaining his strike on family interaction. Trudy could only stop by on the weekend before Christmas, for a few hours. She was going away with her family of employment. A holiday for a very different class of Germany.



On Christmas Eve, Liesel brought down a double handful of snow as a present for Max. Close your eyes, shed said. Hold out your hands. As soon as the snow was transferred, Max shivered and laughed, but he still didnt open his eyes. He only gave the snow a quick taste, allowing it to sink into his lips.



Is this todays weather report?



Liesel stood next to him.



Gently, she touched his arm.



He raised it again to his mouth. Thanks, Liesel.



It was the beginning of the greatest Christmas ever. Little food. No presents. But there was a snowman in their basement.



After delivering the first handfuls of snow, Liesel checked that no one else was outside, then proceeded to take as many buckets and pots out as she could. She filled them with the mounds of snow and ice that blanketed the small strip of world that was Himmel Street. Once they were full, she brought them in and carried them down to the basement.



All things being fair, she first threw a snowball at Max and collected a reply in the stomach. Max even threw one at Hans Hubermann as he made his way down the basement steps.

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