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Book Description
The novel traces the relationship between a German lawyer, Michael, and an older
woman Hanna, beginning with their affair when he is fifteen in post-war ...
23 Reviews
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Beast said on Mar 25, 2010 about the Paperback edition | Add your feedback
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3 people find this helpful




The book once again reconfirmed my impressions on books and movies - the latter are often very good at handling plots but they're so often handicapped in dealing with complicated inner-feelings. The only reason the movie The Reader was made, I think, was to make the book more well-known and reach re ... (continue)
fruit said on Sep 19, 2009 about the Mass Market Paperback edition | 2 feedbacks
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2 people find this helpful
*** This comment contains spoilers! ***




Will be read again
When I read this, I was far too young to fully appreciate the novel. One of the main characters, Hanna, took full responsibility for atrocities she took part in as a concentration camp guard during WWII in order to cover up something she was even more ashamed of. I am confused about why the author c ... (continue)
Nicole said on Dec 9, 2008 about the Paperback edition | Add your feedback
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Hsiaoting said on Mar 28, 2012 about the Mass Market Paperback edition | Add your feedback
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Vale Jane Vesper Eloquim said on Nov 11, 2011 about the Paperback edition | Add your feedback
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Sophie Su said on Aug 4, 2011 about the Paperback edition | Add your feedback
Book Details
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Rating:




(397)
- English Books
- Others 224 Pages
- ISBN-10: 0753801728
- ISBN-13: 9780753801727
- Publisher: Phoenix
- Pub date: Mar 01, 1998
- Also available as: Mass Market Paperback, Paperback, Hardcover, Audio CD, Audio Cassette, School & Library Binding, Unbound and eBook
- In other languages: other languages
Groups with this in collection
Prices Change currency & sellers
| ISBN | Edition | List | Sale | Seller |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 9780753801727 | Others | $53.95 | -- | The Book Depository |
| Other editions → | ||||
| + 13 copies tradable: 1 in USA → | ||||
6 people find this helpful
Emotion Undercurrent
I felt sad reaching the end. When he saw her sitting on the bench, when he called to tell her he had found a place for her, I knew something was wrong. Maybe that’s because I’ve seen the movie and known the ending before I finished the book, still there were hints, lying there in between each word ... (continue)
I felt sad reaching the end. When he saw her sitting on the bench, when he called to tell her he had found a place for her, I knew something was wrong. Maybe that’s because I’ve seen the movie and known the ending before I finished the book, still there were hints, lying there in between each word and every paragraph, in the ways of Michael’s narrative and point of view. It wasn’t obvious, but it was there subtle and subdued. I felt for him for his anger and confusion when Hanna left him, felt for him when he was pushing Hanna away unknowingly. Their memory and feelings for each other had changed and deformed through the story. The reality and what happened afterward made it hard and almost painful to recall or rewind. They had been happy. Not always, but in some quiet transient moment they truly were.
The setting and burden of history left their time together nameless. And when time went on and Hanna left him, he was not sure anymore. Everything an untouchable mess, it’s done and he didn’t now how to take it for anymore. This also happened when concerned with history about Third Reich. It’s already done. And he and people at his age and generations after them all tried to see through it, decode it. They tried to find meanings in it, pin a name to it, or to condemn it. However, as Michael stated, there was no way they could both understand and condemn. So either them were against it, or they were petrified and still against it. There was no way they could understand, because to tell the truth, who could sympathize with a person who had had hundreds of women burn to death? People may try but would never understand. So everything happened in the past was left a miserable mystery.
My favorite parts would be where Hanna whipped him with the belt, where the warden asked him why he didn’t write to say anything to Hanna. That’s where she showed her weakness and helplessness and where he found out that it’s all too late. I didn’t expect finish reading so fast, usually I’m slow at reading English books, perhaps the repressed way of writing and the simplicity had helped. Love this book.
2010/03/25
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