Maus was my favorite read of April. #2024Bracket @CSeydel
Maus was my favorite read of April. #2024Bracket @CSeydel
Finally read this classic - it sure took me long enough. But it is as impressive as I thought it would be. Especially how Art includes his own relationship to his dad into the story. Writing and drawing those memories must have been a hard job, but I think we agree that it was the right thing to do. What an unforgettable way to portrait the Holocaust.
My 5th and final completed book of the 24-hour readathon. I definitely am comfy/cozy right now, so I should get some sleep. It's been a great #readathon. I'm glad to finally read some books that have been on my TBR pile for a long time. #deweysreadathon @DeweysReadathon
Completed my 4th read of the #readathon. This was amazing, and I'm glad I finally picked it up. I think I have to read the 2nd one now too. #deweysreadathon @DeweysReadathon
This is the final scrapbook page I recently completed for my October 2022 scrapbook. It has my reading wrap up for the month. The spiderweb, raven, and words on orange paper are stamped.
My roll of crime scene tape was a great investment. It gets used for lots of things. 😁
Also I highly recommend Maus! 🐀🐀🐀🐀🐀
#LitsyCrafters
@Catsandbooks
It makes me sick that this important, brilliant graphic novel/history has been censored. Art Spiegelman writes/draws about his father‘s Holocaust experiences and about the complicated relationship between father and son. https://cannonballread.com/2023/07/maus-a-survivors-tale-vol-i-my-father-bleeds-...
We read banned books on the beach. #bannedbooks #raisingreaders Happy 4th to everyone one in the the US!
Es realmente chocante escuchar la historia de un judío que realmente estuvo en los momentos del Holocausto. Lo que más llama la atención es que el autor lo haya podido contar en forma de historieta y con animales en vez de personas. Una pensaría que eso hace más amena la lectura, pero es al revés. La cantidad de emociones que me transmitió este libro fueron increíbles. Uno se pone realmente triste al ver a estos “ratones” enamorados, o sufriendo
Just focus on the above horizontal image. It reads:
'All 12 of our household were given now to live in two and a half small rooms.'
Behind it on the board:
'REWARD - For every unregistered Jew you find : 1 kilo of sugar'.
That was a single life's worth then. History has been through a lot of dark times and this surely has been one of the darkest.
I started this book yesterday before going to bed and literally had to force myself to sleep somewhere like 60% in. Otherwise I'd have had completed it then only. It had been in my TBR since so long.
PS - Quite ironic, came through this quote today. Beautiful analogy 😍
Gotta finish 'Maus I'.
I think this is the only graphic memoir about WWII and specifically Auschwitz that I‘ve read. It‘s very good, but of course difficult subject matter. I‘ve wanted to read it for a very long time, and even more so because it‘s a banned book. Which is ridiculous. It‘s so important that people are exposed to this part of history.
I liked that the author was interviewing his dad to get his survival story, it gave context and a view of post-war life.
March Wrap up. 18 books 4 bingos
#SeriesLove23
Jane & the Ghost of Netley and His Lordship‘s Legacy 4🌟each
Before the Coffee Gets Cold 4🌟
Murder in Morningside Heights and on St Nicholas Avenue 4🌟 each
The Miracle at Speedy Motors 3.5🌟
#AAM
Tortilla Flat 2.75🌟
In Dubious Battle 3🌟
Women‘s Prize
Stone Blind 4.5🌟
Homesick 3🌟
Wandering Souls 4🌟
Memphis 4🌟
AuldLangSpine
Maus 5🌟
Count the Ways 4.5 🌟
While the Nazis are the main antagonist in Art Spiegelman's Maus, its arguable that the other antagonist is the holocaust survivor's mental health. Afterwards he struggles to live a happy meaningful life do to all the ways he was scared from his experiences in concentration camp.
Spiegelman starts by showing what a difficult man his dad was to live with, then unfolds the trauma he experienced of surviving the Holocaust, which doesn't excuse all of his later bad behaviour, but certainly explains it. I found that personal story as affective, in its smaller way, as his father's account of the Nazi genocide. 5⭐
Maus is the second of the two graphic novels I‘ve read. The first was They Called Us Enemy. While they may not be my go to, both books were excellent and important. Maus was on my #AuldLangSpine list from @Amiable and I‘m glad to have had the incentive to pick it up. 5🌟 And now I need to read Part II of this story. Thanks for the great recommendation Amy! #52Books #SurvivalStory
Of course, I had to read both... This one some how isn't as terrifying as the first. But it's probably because I can't even fathom how bad it was. Can you truly understand what hell on earth is like? Watching people die from pure exhaustion, walking over corpses, smelling their bodies burn. And constantly realizing that you're probably going to be next. If you don't come up with a plan, you're just like everyone else. Dead.
Stephen King you can keep all your horror stories to yourself. This is one of the scariest books around because it's real. This happened. People just “disappeared“ never to be heard from again. Family members taken away, people asked to pick a side with no knowledge of what each side meant. Hiding, starving, barely surviving in cramped terrifying conditions. What happens when the scariest monster you can think of is real?
I was worried about how those stark black and white illustrations crowding the page would effectively convey such an intensely personal history but it was perfection.
I remember this being around the house when I was a kid, & I know I flipped through it occasionally but I didn‘t decide to sit down & read the whole thing until it was banned earlier this year. (My library clearly needs more copies cuz it‘s been on hold since then!) I didn‘t remember this being a dual timeline story. Grounding it in the ‘present‘ really helped me connect with it by showing 2 such different generations‘ takes.
I don't know what to say. There are so many books about the Holocaust but the Maus series just hits differently. 4⭐️
#JoysOfJune
#Maus #ArtSpiegelman #book #books #bookhoarder #bookhoarders #bookhaul #bookhauler #bookholic #bookholics #bookheaven #bookjunkie #bookjunkies #bookjunky #bookjacket #bookjackets #bookjacketdesign #bookjacketdesigner #bookkeeper #bookkeeperife #bookkeeping #bookloot #booklist #booklust #booklove #booklover #booklovers #bookloversunite #bookz #bookzesty #bookzilla #bookzine #bookzone #bookxcess #bookcollection #bookcollector #bookcase #bookcases ❣️
After a school in Tennessee banned the book, I went out and purchased my own copy.
First graphic novel I've ever read (My husband teasingly would ask, "How's your comic book?", to which I would reply, "Oh,my Pulitzer Prize winning graphic novel? It's amazing!").
With Jews depicted as mice & Nazis depicted as cats, this heartbreaking memoir about a son's quest to document his father's experience in Nazi occupied Poland deserves all the accolades.
This has been languishing on my TBR for years and I finally picked it up due the ridiculous banning in TN. Spiegelman‘s work is powerful and it‘s important to hear his father‘s story. The book is not only about the Holocaust though. It‘s also about the author‘s relationship with his parents, especially his father. I can‘t recommend this graphic novel enough.
I mean…wow…what an emotional experience. I don‘t have the right words to articulate my feelings.
⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️
Finished this and handed it to my 13 year old son. Hopefully it is something we will both enjoy.
Picked up another graphic novel haul from the library because this finally came in on reserve for me!
My library hold came through, so we‘re bumping this to the top of my reading list.
I think I liked this better this second time around; I was paying better attention. Although the current day story in Part II didn‘t focus as much on Art‘s father and his 2nd wife, but there was still plenty happening in the “current” day with Art, his wife, and his father. We had a few more nationalities in part II, all drawn with/represented by different types of animals. Cont in comments.
I read this in 1999, 2014 and then again last month after that backward school district banned it. I never mentioned Maus II here though, so a late post. In brief, it‘s brilliant, surprisingly powerful yet again, and one of those books you can‘t help wishing everyone would read. What caught my attention this time is how secondary the actual story is, the Auschwitz story, and how much is about his relationship with his father, and his art.
1. My TBR bookshelf.
2. Tagged
3. Only one so far-The Paris Orphan
Thanks for the tag @Eggs #wondrouswednesday
A few years back, I made a change to only read #OwnVoices books when the topic is the Holocaust. Surprisingly, I hadn‘t read this one yet. When it was banned in 8th grade classrooms in TN, the state right next door, at the same time it appeared on Maya‘s curriculum, I knew it was time. We‘ve been discussing it this week, and the many parallels to my husband ms family history. Spiegelman recounts his family experience from his father‘s POV ⬇️
When I saw the news that this book was being banned I had to check it out. After reading it in a couple hours, I don‘t see why it was banned. The people that banned this book must forget that teens hear and see worse on tv and from their peers. This is part of our awful world history and it needs to be taught, not banned. I hope this book gets into the hands of the students where it is being banned!
The censorship of books is disconcerting. If you don‘t want to read something don‘t, but don‘t abrogate my right to so so. No earth shattering observations here but needs to be said. The only way a book can hurt me is if you hit me over the head with it. Apologies to those I didn‘t tag
Impressive. I ordered this as soon as I read the article about it being banned.
Look what‘s next up in Maya‘s 8th grade ELA class?
I love her school. #bannedbooks #readbannedbooks
The fact that this is “banned” blows my mind (except it doesn‘t, because almost nothing can shock me these days). Graphic novels aren‘t usually my thing, but this is worth a read. It‘s heartbreaking but it‘s important that we hear true accounts of these atrocities lest we forget…
I bought this because it‘s been banned and I‘d never read it. I was never into graphic novels, but this is a wonderful, difficult, heart wrenching book.
My book video this week is a little bit different than usual - I combined the Teens & Adults into one video so I could talk about books that have been recently banned/challenged! This one is really close to my heart! ❤ Please give it a view and a like! I would really appreciate it! 💕 📖
Teens & Adult Book Recs: Recently Banned/Challenged Books:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wYdHyaWXPcw&t=154s
My son has The Complete Maus so I was able to read the 2nd part of the story today. Matthew, who read this in the 8th grade and is now 22, and I had a discussion about why people would want to ban this. He may not be a reader but even he knows that banning books is stupid and that it backfires.
The 2nd part was just as good as the first and I still believe everyone should read this.
I‘m appalled by the senseless banning of this but very grateful to have read it. I‘ll be sharing with my kids and students and many others. ❤️
In partnership with The Synagogue, Magic City Books is giving away free copies of Maus in person while supplies last 👏👏
I read an interesting article with Art Spiegelman addressing the Tennessee school board decision. He had a few good points: 1. People want a “warm & fuzzy” Holocaust version of events. 2. The school board wants to promote a version where the Americans were the heroes and use that message as their focus on WWII 3. This was never about nudity (it‘s a mouse) or profanity but the resistance of facing the dark and evil side of humanity. #Defiance
⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️ Spiegelman‘s second volume focuses on his father Vladek‘s time in the camps. It‘s a brutal read, and as with volume one, we also glimpse the aftereffects. Surviving is a lifelong challenge. I can‘t stress enough how essential these books are to better understanding what so many innocent people experienced. It‘s within the pages of banned and challenged books, that empathy flourishes.