Original Content: IHQ Reviews
Bruno, a nine-year-old kid, takes you on a journey. Needless to say, a nine-year-old would not enjoy this book. And soon you and Bruno will find themselves at a fence together. All around the world, there are fences similar to this one. We really hope that you never have to deal with one.
According to John Boyne, the nine-year-old son of Auschwitz’s commandant wanders to the fence encircling the camp and encounters a nine-year-old captive. This leads to a friendship that continues on a daily basis, via the fence.
Here is a review of the book for you to decide whether or not it is a story that suits your taste.
Plot
With the historical fiction novel, The Boy in the Striped Pyjamas, by John Boyne, we explore the realm of Bruno, a nine-year-old boy whose family moves to a home near a Nazi gas chamber.
An unreliable fence is the only thing that separates two innocent youngsters who belong to two vastly different worlds.
Berlin, 1942, the war in Europe is drawing to a close, and along followed the Holocaust. Bruno is a nine-year-old child from a well-to-do German household. When his father is assigned commander in a remote location, his life is pretty unremarkable. Despite the fact that they are forced to move from their home in Out-With to a far smaller one, the family is forced to leave everything behind in order to achieve the essential rank advancement.
Bruno discovers a little window in his new house, which allows him to glimpse an enormously wide region with tiny little cottages, and an unending number of tiny little individuals dressed in a peculiar striped costume. Adults, seniors, and children, in an enormous, wire-fenced area.
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