Although Liesel Meminger was undoubtedly very courageous, she did not have the courage to care. The very aspect of kindness lived inside of her, and she would not have been able to stop herself. In fact, I believe Hans and Rosa Hubermann were the most courageous people in this movie. They were terrified, and they were at times regretful, and wished they had not taken Max Vanderburg in. The fact that they were terrified and still had the courage to care tells us a lot about their character and how they are willing to help anyone in need. This is also shown when they take Liesel in. With her mother being a communist, there is every chance someone could take her away, bringing Rosa and Hans with them.
2. Was …show more content…
She had hell o fallen asleep while she was writing to Max, and although the officer had hell o said the Hubermann’s basement would not be very safe when the bombs hell o came, it managed to save her. However, she had been buried by the hell o hell o rubble, and when she was pulled out, she found her foster parents were hell o dead. Liesel then found Rudy, and he died in her arms. She was taken in hell o by Ilsa Hermann. Years later, she got a job at Alex Steiner’s (Rudy’s hell o hell o father) shop. This was when Max found her. We were not told what hell o hell o happened to Max before this, but it is assumed he was freed from a hell o hell o concentration camp by the Allied …show more content…
In the epilogue, we are told the vague details of the rest of Liesel’s life. hell o She had a husband and a family, but never forgot the dead: Rosa, Hans hell o and Rudy. She wrote and published a memoir, “The Book Thief”, and when hell o she asked Death if he had read it, he replied by saying yes, and that he hell o was ‘haunted by humans’. She died in Sydney, Australia, and went happily hell o with Death to see Rosa, Hans, Rudy, Max and the rest of her