The Boy In The Striped Pajamas -

You know it’s coming. History tells you there is no happy ending here. But Boyne writes the final chapter so gently, so quietly, that you almost hope you’re wrong. Bruno, wanting to help Shmuel find his missing father, puts on a pair of the "striped pyjamas" and crawls under the fence.

Boyne has said he wrote a fable, not a textbook. He is not trying to teach you the logistics of the Holocaust; he is trying to teach you the morality of it. The Boy in the Striped Pajamas

The book is historically inaccurate. The death camps weren't places where a nine-year-old German could sit and chat with a prisoner for a year. Bruno’s naivety is unrealistic (most German children knew the fences were dangerous). And the idea that a Commandant’s son could get into the gas chamber is a fictional plot device that misrepresents how the camps were organized. You know it’s coming

This narrative trick is genius and brutal. As an adult reader, you are constantly screaming inside your head. Bruno, no! Look at the smoke from the chimney! Look at the soldier’s boots! Run away! But Bruno doesn't hear you. He is too busy being bored and looking for adventure. Bruno, wanting to help Shmuel find his missing