Saturday, September 5, 2015

What is the significance of the dominos in the scene where the two Nazis come for Rudy?

In part eight of Zusak's The Book Thief, there is a section called "Dominoes and Darkness." It is here where the two Nazis come for Rudy, but get his father instead. While they are trying to convince his parents to allow him to go to a special school that trains future Nazi officers, Rudy is playing dominoes in the next room with his siblings. He sets up three formations that will all converge in...

In part eight of Zusak's The Book Thief, there is a section called "Dominoes and Darkness." It is here where the two Nazis come for Rudy, but get his father instead. While they are trying to convince his parents to allow him to go to a special school that trains future Nazi officers, Rudy is playing dominoes in the next room with his siblings. He sets up three formations that will all converge in the middle at the same tower.



"Together, they would watch everything that was so carefully planned collapse, and they would all smile at the beauty of destruction" (408).



Zusak's word choice in the above passage not only creates a foreshadowing of the destruction that the Steiner family will see in the coming months, but also a symbolic connection between the dominoes and people's lives. For example, Kurt comes in after all of the dominoes fall and says, "They look like dead bodies" (410). This is another foreshadowing of all the dead bodies that the Steiners and the town of Molching will experience as the Allies penetrate deeper into Germany and as the war continues.


Thus, the dominoes represent cause and effect. Just as one domino falls, others are taken out in the process. This can be likened to the decision that the Steiners make at this point in the story. Instead of sending Rudy to military school, they are forced to send their husband and father to war—cause and effect. The decision to send the father to war and keep Rudy home sets off a series of events that may have also caused Rudy's death. Had Rudy been at military school, he may have been saved from the bombings of Molching and lived.

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