Friday 25 October 2013

Je fais du baby-sitting (and half term!!)

Babysitting - the best-paid job in existence. I get paid £5 an hour for, today, reading my new book and watching YouTube videos. Previously, things I have been paid for include: revising my French verbs and video chatting with my friend. Whilst drinking hot chocolate. Not bad.

And it's finally half term! A week of… well, mainly homework, but other things too - tomorrow I'm going out for lunch and shopping with my friends :). I'm very very very glad it's the holidays.

Ooh! Something related I learnt in German yesterday: Nächstes Woche, ich bleibe zu Hause. (Look it up).

Anyway. Today my copy of Allegiant came!! I am up to page 420 - it took me about four and a half hours. (Another thing you should know about me - I read quickly). It is FANTASTIC. You should read it. All of you. Even the two of you in South Korea. I see you - you can't hide ;-)

I won't do spoilers until November, to give people a chance to read it.

I can't really think of anything else to say - so adiós, au revoir and auf Wiedersehen to all of you :)

Buy Allegiant here

Friday 18 October 2013

The Book Thief by Markus Zusak

Hi. I'm back.

I've just finished reading "The Book Thief" by Markus Zusak, and I thought I'd review it. I'm looking to do quite a few book reviews in the future, so hopefully I'm not too bad at it!

Firstly, my copy has a beautiful cover: it's made to look like old parchment, and has a picture of a little girl dancing with Death. The story is set in war-time Nazi Germany, and follows the story of a little girl named Liesel and the people who live on her street in a town just outside Munich. It is narrated by Death (the Grim Reaper, if you will), and documents his(?) relationship with her. Liesel is a member of German society, which I found very interesting as the only other books that I've read that have been set in Nazi Germany were written from the point of view of a Jew, or an otherwise 'inferior' person in the eyes of the Nazis. She lives with two foster parents, as her mother and father were taken away to a concentration camp. Liesel does not know this, but the only thing she knows about her absent father is that he was labelled "Kommunist" by the Nazis. It takes her a long time to figure out the meaning of this label, but when she does, she is accepting of it. She is told to behave well, as she has brown eyes, which wasn't consistent with Hitler's "Aryan" dream. However, she grows close to her foster father, as he teaches her to read and write - this is why she steals books. Her first book was found on the ground at her younger brother's funeral, and together she and 'Papa' work their way through "The Grave Digger's Handbook". She gradually steals more and more books, eventually forming a friendship with the Mayor (Bürgermeister)'s wife through her passion with words. When her foster father faces a time of great peril, she stands by him and helps him keep his secret about the 'Fist-Fighting Jew' in return for him not telling anyone about her thievery.

I really enjoyed this book because it was so emotional. I particularly liked the use of German words peppered through the text, as I have a personal interest in languages, and I have just begun to learn German myself, but I'm not sure when I'll need to use "Saumensch" or "Saukerl" in one of my classes!! (Look them up!) I'm also really interested in history so I found the cultural elements of the setting interesting. It was beautifully written and very moving. I would heartily recommend it to anyone :)

The video that introduced me to this book
The Book Thief on Amazon
The Book Thief at The Book Depository

Wednesday 9 October 2013

Stress and No Creativity.

I won't lie - I am very, very stressed at the moment. I thought I'd got on top of sixth form and the workload, but I was wrong. I don't know what else to say, really. I have no creative inspiration tonight. Sorry.
Here is a picture of a cat that looks like a bat that I found on Tumblr to keep you going until I can come up with something interesting. Because it's October.