Rating:  Summary: Outstanding Review: This book is masterfully written, making it, quite rightfully, emotionally draining to read. This is certainly the most upsetting book I have ever read, but it is that very aspect that makes it a must-read.
Rating:  Summary: the greatest horror of the world begins Review: just when you thought humanity could be peaceful... .... i will never forgive the Nazis for introducing their way into the world... it continues today. down with fascism in all its forms!!!
Rating:  Summary: Excellent Review: I found this book very enlightening. I really appreciated the personal and emotional impact of what the author was experiencing. Part of what makes this book so captivating, is that Wiesel doesn't just list all of the attrocities that he experienced. Rather, he focuses mainly on the physical and emotional impact of living in a concetration camp. Wiesel takes the reader through a journey that starts with his steadfast belief, then through his loss of faith and lastly to his eventual dispair. Finally, his inner struggle concerning his father is very revealing of the human condition when pushed beyond all limits.
Rating:  Summary: Open Your Eyes to this "Night" Review: I read some chapters of this book when I was in Hebrew school. I was not even 12 then. I am forever haunted by the portion of how Mr. Wiesel described how he saw his sister being lead away with their mother and how he never saw her again.I come here to find marvolous reviews that this book deserves. But my heart breaks at the how many of these reviews complain about this story, discredit this story. People have reviewed this book saying that what happened to 11,000,000 people (Jews, Catholics, homosexuals, invalids, men, women, children, and infants) never exited. That it was a lie. 11,000,000 people were murdered. 11,000,000 innocent lives. Try to explain to me how 11,000,000 people upped and vanished. Try to explain what Mr. Wiesel saw when he was just a young boy. This book is gruesome and graphic because what happened to him and to the rest of the 11,000,000 lives that were snuffed out was gruesome. People say that Anne Frank's story is better. But we only hear of her life in hiding. We never hear of the torture she went through in that concentration camp. How she died, a mere month before freedom came. Elie Wiesel survived and he tells this story so we cannot forget. So we cannot deny. That man can be a hideous and wretched creature. That people will throw babies into the air and shoot them. There are such people in this world. Open your eyes to this.
Rating:  Summary: Lifechanging experience Review: Night, by Elie Weisel, is a book different than any other I have read. Many opinions about history, and even life in some cases changed while reading Night. For a very long time I believed that Josef Stalin was the most evil man to live in the twentieth century. After reading Night I believe that Hitler and his relentless "fight" to exterminate Hebrews from the face of the planet is the most evil act of hate ever. Elie Weisel is a 12 year old boy living in the town of Sighet. Untouched by Nazis until about 1942, Elie begins his long tour of numerous concentration camps throughout Europe. This book is about the lengths a human will go through to survive. Night is about love, hope, determination, and the spirit of humanity to survive, forgive, and to inform us, the readers, that we must never forget the lives lost during the years of Nazi occupied Germany. We must never forget how 12 million people just like you and I were executed because of differences. Night is a book that should eventually be read by all high school students. I am still humbled by Night.
Rating:  Summary: chilling Review: I have read a number of Holocaust books and most all of them are poinant and moving. There are some works that seem more of an exploitive nature but mostly each work is another opportunity to try and understand the incomprehendable. Numbers tend to numb but first person accounts bring to life the insanity that was and is the Holocaust. In "Night", Elie Wiesel does as good a job as anyone in giving us a glimpse of life in a death camp. What stands out is how well he is able to say so much with such brevity. Every sentence has its' purpose and every character his as well. There are many unforgetable passages. One I recall tells of a fellow prisoner who spoke of loading corpses and discovering he was loading his own father. That and many other images will stay with me forever. This book should be read by all.
Rating:  Summary: Small but packed with eye opening power. Review: No matter how much I think I know about the horror of the Holocaust during World War II, whenever I read an unknown view my disbelief and disgust continues to grow. This especially holds true with Elie Wiezel's personal account of this terrible time in his life. Wiezel is a teenage boy who goes through the journey that we have become familiar with. His family endures the infamous Star of David armbands, Jewish ghettos, and the crowded train ride that leads them to their fate. The family is separated at the first concentration camp, Auschwitz. Elie is able to stay with his father as him mother and sisters are ushered away, most likely to the crematories that are blazing and smoking of human flesh. As Elie and his father are being moved, Elie loses his faith with each step. As he watched young children being burned alive, his God was murdered forever. This is such a significant part of the book because it shows the incredible impact that only one night had on this boy. This boy who was so completely devoted to his religion and faith, but lost it all after one night in a concentration camp. After this night, staying with his father and getting food were the two most important things to Elie, in that order. As the time wore on, Elie began to find himself hoping for freedom from his father's burden. This also shows how the Holocaust tore people down until they could care about nothing. Elie Wiezel lived to tell his story and people should definitely take the opportunity to see through his eyes. It's hard to read and a difficult subject matter, but it opens up people's eyes. I have deep appreciation for this book but it would have had a larger impact if the book were longer.
Rating:  Summary: seems more like a medival horror story Review: What Elie Weisel has accomplished in this book is beyond description. I have read a lot of books about concentration camps but such graphic descriptions are hard to come. most of the time it gives you shivers and sends chills down your spine. I just cannot believe why the rest of the world so silent for such a long time before acting more aggressively? I do not understand how he kept his balance - it seems tragedy saw no limits and the sensation of sadness due to a tragedy ceased to exist. I just hope people remember this tragedy to understand the boundaries of our cannibalism that still exist amongst some of the 'civilized" human beings in the developed nation. Well we have seen history repeat at Rwanda. I will also recommend a book called We wish to inform you that tomorrow we will be killed with our family. Same genre but different taste - little milder. Night primarily deals with Elie's experiences in the camp - there are often touches of the soul which reminds us that the soul never died even when tortured to such extremes. Endurance and love for life helped him to survive. This can be our guide for survival in the rainy days.
Rating:  Summary: The horror of humanity Review: I have heard the question asked more than once "How could they just stand there and let the Holocaust happen and not fight back?" Elie Wiesel has answered this question along with describing his ordeal he suffered at the hands of the Nazis. The short simply written book shows the true horror when man suffers at the hand of man. He gives descritions of various moments during his concentration stay and the reader is left knowing that these moments happend all of the time to the victims. The humiliation, torture, and degradation were commonplace. More imporantly. Wiesel writes about thinking at any given moment how to survive even if it meant turning his back on his friends. He describes how various people would leave loved ones to die so they could survive themselves. Animal instinct took over when humanity failed. This is truly an imporant book of a first hand witness and should never ever be forgotten. Highly reccommended.
Rating:  Summary: Thinking About The Holocaust? Or Just Interested? Review: Night by Elie Wiesel was very interesting, sad and kept me reading it non-stop. Some points in this book were very inhumane yet depressing at the same time. Elie had gotten emotionally scarred many times and was harassed too by Nazi guards when he was a prisoner at Auschwitz. This book was very engrossing to me, because it identifies with something distressing that has happened in my religion. I advise you to buy this book for a good read.
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