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John Boyne

The boy in the striped pyjamas

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  • Lanahas quoted2 years ago
    The thing about exploring is that you have to know whether the thing you've found is worth finding.
  • Lanahas quoted2 years ago
    And who decided which people wore the striped pyjamas and which people wore the uniforms?
  • Lanahas quoted2 years ago
    just felt empty and cold, as if he was in the loneliest place in the world. The middle of nowhere.
  • Thomas Everett Vanderboomhas quoted2 years ago
    On most days the young lieutenant looked very smart, striding around in a uniform that appeared to have been ironed while he was wearing it. His black boots always sparkled with polish and his yellow-blond hair was parted at the side and held perfectly in place with something that made all the comb marks stand out in it, like a field that had just been tilled. Also he wore so much cologne that you could smell him coming from quite a distance. Bruno had learned not to stand downwind of him or he would risk fainting away.

    On this particular day, however, since it was a Saturday morning and was so sunny, he was not so perfectly groomed. Instead he was wearing a white vest over his trousers and his hair flopped down over his forehead in exhaustion. His arms were surprisingly tanned and he had the kind of muscles that Bruno wished he had himself. He looked so much younger today that Bruno was surprised; in fact he reminded him of the big boys at school, the ones he always steered clear of. Lieutenant Kotler was deep in conversation with Gretel and whatever he was saying must have been terribly funny because she was laughing loudly and twirling her hair around her fingers into ringlets.
  • Thomas Everett Vanderboomhas quoted2 years ago
    Franz was a very lovely young man—I knew him when I was a little girl. He was kind and thoughtful and could make his way around a dance floor like Fred Astaire. But he suffered a terrible injury during the Great War, an injury to his head, and that's why he behaves as he does now. It's nothing to laugh at. You have no idea of what the young men went through back then. Their suffering.'
  • Thomas Everett Vanderboomhas quoted2 years ago
    Bruno had only known one person whom he considered to be mad and that was Herr Roller, a man of about the same age as Father, who lived round the corner from him back at the old house in Berlin. He was often seen walking up and down the street at all hours of the day or night, having terrible arguments with himself. Sometimes, in the middle of these arguments, the dispute would get out of hand and he would try to punch the shadow he was throwing up against the wall. From time to time he fought so hard that he banged his fists against the brickwork and they bled and then he would fall onto his knees and start crying loudly and slapping his hands against his head. On a few occasions Bruno had heard him using those words that he wasn't allowed to use, and when he did this Bruno had to stop himself from giggling.
  • b9826505251has quoted2 years ago
    Bruno had an urge to give Shmuel a hug, just to let him know how much he liked him and how much he'd enjoyed talking to him over the last year.
    Shmuel had an urge to give Bruno a hug too, just to thank him for all his many kindnesses, and his gifts of food, and the fact that he was going to help him find Papa.
  • b9826505251has quoted2 years ago
    He said the word 'home', despite the fact that he wasn't sure where 'home' was any more.
  • b9826505251has quoted2 years ago
    Do you think that I would have made such a success of my life if I hadn't learned when to argue and when to keep my mouth shut and follow orders?
  • b9826505251has quoted2 years ago
    you think that I would have made such a success of my life if I hadn't learned when to argue and when to keep my mouth shut and follow orders?
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