Yes, of course she does! Why else would she kiss her best friend at the end of the book? She also had fantasies about him in the months before he died. Terribly sad, though as he doesn't get the kiss he always wanted from Liesel, until he was dead.
The girl in "The Book Thief" is named Liesel Meminger.
The book does not give a specific date but tell us Liesel's birthday is in mid February 1939.
Liesel meets Max in The Book Thief when he arrives at her foster family's home seeking refuge, as they are hiding him from the Nazis. Max is a Jewish man who becomes close friends with Liesel during his time in hiding.
In the book "The Book Thief" by Markus Zusak, Liesel reads from "The Whistler" by Leon Garfield to everyone in the basement on page 219. The passage she reads is about Jessie and Snow.
The main characters in "The Book Thief" are Liesel Meminger, a young girl living in Nazi Germany, her foster parents Hans and Rosa Hubermann, her friend Rudy Steiner, and Max Vandenburg, a Jewish man who hides in their basement. The story follows Liesel's experiences during World War II as she finds solace and courage through the power of words.
Liesel Meminger dies many years after the war in the book The Book Thief. It is long after she was reunited with Max. After she dies Death gives her the book she wrote and threw away many years ago.
well the story takes place in Germany so she most likely has blue eyes
well its nice to think that she and max get married isn't it? it doesn't say who her husband is, and since the book is FICTION, no one will ever know.
Liesel Meminger lives in Molching, a fictional town in Nazi Germany, in the novel "The Book Thief" by Markus Zusak.
Yes, Liesel Meminger is a trustworthy character. Throughout the novel "The Book Thief" by Markus Zusak, Liesel is shown to be honest, loyal, and dependable in her relationships with others.
In part 3 of "The Book Thief," a cliffhanger occurs when Liesel is caught stealing a book from the mayor's wife's library and is confronted by the mayor himself. The suspense arises from the uncertainty of how the mayor will react to Liesel's actions and what consequences she may face.
Liesel wrote her second letter to her mother, although it was unlikely her mother would ever receive it as she was separated from Liesel during World War II.