---
product_id: 107301411
title: "Book thief: 10th anniversary edition"
price: "117 zł"
currency: PLN
in_stock: true
reviews_count: 13
url: https://www.desertcart.pl/products/107301411-book-thief-10th-anniversary-edition
store_origin: PL
region: Poland
---

# Book thief: 10th anniversary edition

**Price:** 117 zł
**Availability:** ✅ In Stock

## Quick Answers

- **What is this?** Book thief: 10th anniversary edition
- **How much does it cost?** 117 zł with free shipping
- **Is it available?** Yes, in stock and ready to ship
- **Where can I buy it?** [www.desertcart.pl](https://www.desertcart.pl/products/107301411-book-thief-10th-anniversary-edition)

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- Customers looking for quality international products

## Why This Product

- Free international shipping included
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## Description

The New York Times and Sunday Times bestseller'A novel of breathtaking scope' Guardian1939.SOME IMPORTANT INFORMATION - THIS NOVEL IS NARRATED BY DEATHThis new edition features exclusive first chapter from Markus Zusak's brand new literary novel BRIDGE OF

Review: A Time Machine Read - I'd been avoiding THE BOOK THIEF for awhile. Not sure why. It was recommended to me by one of my students so I took the dive. Excellent book. Not only did Zusak take us back in time to create - recreate - WWII problems, he found a way to make the connection pertinent to the 21st Century, but any century. Well done.
Review: The Book Thief This is a beautifully balanced piece of storytelling by a young Australian writer - The Book Thief This is a beautifully balanced piece of storytelling by a young Australian writer: Marcus Zusak. The book is narrated by death himself. Death is rendered vividly. He is a lonely, haunted being who is drawn to children, who has had a lot of time to contemplate human nature and wonder about it. We are introduced to this narrator in the beginning and he is with us till the very end. It gives away the end and still wants you to keep reading on. The narrative is easy flowing with glimpses of what is yet to come: sometimes misleading, sometimes all too true. We meet all shades of Germans, from truly committed Nazis to the likes of poor Hans Hubermann who hides a Jew in the basement of his very modest home. I was humbled by the realization that most of us are incapable of doing what noble souls Hans and Rosa do for saving the human race. This is what makes this novel truly remarkable. The author says he was inspired by two real-life events related to him by his German parents: the bombing of Munich, and a teenage boy offering bread to an emaciated, withered Jew being marched through the streets. Both the boy and Jewish prisoner were whipped by a soldier while hapless crowd looked on! It is also the way in which Zusak combines such terrible events with truly believable characters and the details of everyday life in Nazi Germany. All this made The Book Thief so special for me. In addition to the protagonist Liesel (the book thief of the title), there are some very important characters in the story. Those who particularly stood out for me are Rudy Steiner, a close friend of Liesel who is obsessed with the black athlete Jesse Owens. Ilsa Hermann, the mayor's wife, who has never recovered from the loss of her own son. Liesel's adoptive parents Hans and Rosa Hubermann and of course Max Vandenburg the Jew decorator whose father had saved Hans’ life during the first world war when they are both German soldiers. The growing relationships between Hubermanns and Liesel and, later, Liesel and Max Vandenburg are central to the plot. Max writes and illustrates a strangely beautiful short story for Liesel over whitewashed pages from a copy of Hitler's Mein Kampf (the original print can still be seen through the paint). The powerful short story and illustrations almost broke my heart. Hans, who can’t read very well himself, teaches Liesel to read. Liesel is effectively an orphan. She never knew her father. Her mother disappears after delivering her to her new foster parents. Her younger brother died on the train to Molching where the foster parents live. Death first encounters nine-year-old Liesel when her brother dies. It (death) hangs around long enough to watch Liesel steal her first book - The Gravedigger's Handbook, left lying in the snow by her brother's grave. Death has in his possession (I have always considered death as ‘she’) the book Leisel wrote about 1939 to 1943. In a way, they are both book thieves. Liesel steals randomly at first, and later more methodically. But she's never greedy. Death pockets Liesel's notebook after she leaves it, forgotten in her grief, amongst the destruction that was once her street, her home, her mama and papa. Death carries the book with him. As I went through the book I kept feeling how real Liesel was! She was a child living a child's life. A life that has chores, soccer in the street, stolen pleasures, school fights, sudden passions and a full heart! Around her bombs are dropped, maimed veterans hang themselves, bereaved parents move like ghosts, Gestapo take children away and the dirty skeletons of Jews are paraded through the town. However, there are a number of things that prevent this book from being all-out depressing. It is very powerful from the beginning but not morbid. A lively humor peeks through the pages. (a comment about German’s loving pigs, the childish chats between Rudi and Liesel). Furthermore, the vivid descriptions as well as the richness of the characters lift your spirits up. In this balanced story, ordinary Germans - those with blond hair and blue eyes are as much at risk of losing their lives, or are being persecuted, as the Jews themselves. It made me cry.

## Technical Specifications

| Specification | Value |
|---------------|-------|
| Best Sellers Rank | #51,176 in Books ( See Top 100 in Books ) #359 in World War II Historical Fiction #543 in Historical Fantasy (Books) #558 in War Fiction (Books) |
| Customer Reviews | 4.5 out of 5 stars 31,524 Reviews |

## Images

![Book thief: 10th anniversary edition - Image 1](https://m.media-amazon.com/images/I/71H52+sSb4L.jpg)

## Customer Reviews

### ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ A Time Machine Read
*by R***N on January 30, 2026*

I'd been avoiding THE BOOK THIEF for awhile. Not sure why. It was recommended to me by one of my students so I took the dive. Excellent book. Not only did Zusak take us back in time to create - recreate - WWII problems, he found a way to make the connection pertinent to the 21st Century, but any century. Well done.

### ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ The Book Thief This is a beautifully balanced piece of storytelling by a young Australian writer
*by A***R on November 19, 2014*

The Book Thief This is a beautifully balanced piece of storytelling by a young Australian writer: Marcus Zusak. The book is narrated by death himself. Death is rendered vividly. He is a lonely, haunted being who is drawn to children, who has had a lot of time to contemplate human nature and wonder about it. We are introduced to this narrator in the beginning and he is with us till the very end. It gives away the end and still wants you to keep reading on. The narrative is easy flowing with glimpses of what is yet to come: sometimes misleading, sometimes all too true. We meet all shades of Germans, from truly committed Nazis to the likes of poor Hans Hubermann who hides a Jew in the basement of his very modest home. I was humbled by the realization that most of us are incapable of doing what noble souls Hans and Rosa do for saving the human race. This is what makes this novel truly remarkable. The author says he was inspired by two real-life events related to him by his German parents: the bombing of Munich, and a teenage boy offering bread to an emaciated, withered Jew being marched through the streets. Both the boy and Jewish prisoner were whipped by a soldier while hapless crowd looked on! It is also the way in which Zusak combines such terrible events with truly believable characters and the details of everyday life in Nazi Germany. All this made The Book Thief so special for me. In addition to the protagonist Liesel (the book thief of the title), there are some very important characters in the story. Those who particularly stood out for me are Rudy Steiner, a close friend of Liesel who is obsessed with the black athlete Jesse Owens. Ilsa Hermann, the mayor's wife, who has never recovered from the loss of her own son. Liesel's adoptive parents Hans and Rosa Hubermann and of course Max Vandenburg the Jew decorator whose father had saved Hans’ life during the first world war when they are both German soldiers. The growing relationships between Hubermanns and Liesel and, later, Liesel and Max Vandenburg are central to the plot. Max writes and illustrates a strangely beautiful short story for Liesel over whitewashed pages from a copy of Hitler's Mein Kampf (the original print can still be seen through the paint). The powerful short story and illustrations almost broke my heart. Hans, who can’t read very well himself, teaches Liesel to read. Liesel is effectively an orphan. She never knew her father. Her mother disappears after delivering her to her new foster parents. Her younger brother died on the train to Molching where the foster parents live. Death first encounters nine-year-old Liesel when her brother dies. It (death) hangs around long enough to watch Liesel steal her first book - The Gravedigger's Handbook, left lying in the snow by her brother's grave. Death has in his possession (I have always considered death as ‘she’) the book Leisel wrote about 1939 to 1943. In a way, they are both book thieves. Liesel steals randomly at first, and later more methodically. But she's never greedy. Death pockets Liesel's notebook after she leaves it, forgotten in her grief, amongst the destruction that was once her street, her home, her mama and papa. Death carries the book with him. As I went through the book I kept feeling how real Liesel was! She was a child living a child's life. A life that has chores, soccer in the street, stolen pleasures, school fights, sudden passions and a full heart! Around her bombs are dropped, maimed veterans hang themselves, bereaved parents move like ghosts, Gestapo take children away and the dirty skeletons of Jews are paraded through the town. However, there are a number of things that prevent this book from being all-out depressing. It is very powerful from the beginning but not morbid. A lively humor peeks through the pages. (a comment about German’s loving pigs, the childish chats between Rudi and Liesel). Furthermore, the vivid descriptions as well as the richness of the characters lift your spirits up. In this balanced story, ordinary Germans - those with blond hair and blue eyes are as much at risk of losing their lives, or are being persecuted, as the Jews themselves. It made me cry.

### ⭐⭐⭐⭐ A touching story with a different take on WW2
*by I***Y on June 29, 2014*

Although WW2 has been much written about I loved reading this book for several reasons: The style of writing is beautiful and the choice of narrator unusual, making for a range of narration styles from rather detached, to deeply emotional to abstract. To me this made it very real because this is representative of how humans experience the horrors not only of war but of life itself. Yet at the same time everyday life continues and sometimes we simply experience a bluntness just to get by. I have heard and read many stories of ww2 and not all Germans were horrid Nazis. Many were decent human beings taken over by events beyond their control. Experiencing this time through the life of a young girl who simply lives and survives with her friend, her love of books, and the love and caring of her foster parents. The book does not lecture, it does not tell us what to think, it just lets us experience. I believe that a good children's or young adult book is one enjoyed by all ages and The Book Thief delivers this. I highly recommend this book to adults of all ages.

## Frequently Bought Together

- BOOK THIEF, THE [B](REI)
- To Kill a Mockingbird
- Fahrenheit 451

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*Product available on Desertcart Poland*
*Store origin: PL*
*Last updated: 2026-06-02*