Markus Zusak
Author of The Book Thief
About the Author
Markus Zusak was born in Sydney, Australia on June 23, 1975. He began writing at the age of 16, and seven years later his first book, The Underdog, was published. He is best known for his young adult novels The Book Thief and I Am the Messenger, both of which are Michael L. Printz Honor books. The show more Book Thief was adapted into a movie. His next book, Bridge of Clay was published October 2018. It won 2019 Indie Book Awards for Debut Fiction and Book of the Year. (Bowker Author Biography) show less
Series
Works by Markus Zusak
The Failurist 9 copies
Книжный вор : [роман : 16+] 1 copy
Associated Works
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Legal name
- Zusak, Markus Frank
- Birthdate
- 1975-06-23
- Gender
- male
- Education
- Engadine High School
University of New South Wales (BA) (English and History)
University of New South Wales (DiplEd) - Occupations
- janitor
high school English teacher
novelist - Awards and honors
- Margaret A. Edwards Award (2014)
NSW Premier's Literary Award (Ethel Turner Prize) (2003)
Kathleen Mitchell Award 2006 (literature) (2006)
National Jewish Book Award (Children's and Young Adult Literature) (2006)
Ena Noel Award – the IBBY Australia Ena Noël Encouragement Award for Children's Literature (2008)
New South Wales Premier's Literary Awards Ethel Turner Prize for Young People's Literature (2003) (show all 13)
Children's Book Council of Australia Book of the Year Award (2003)
Publishers Weekly Best Books of the Year-Children (2005)
Bulletin Blue Ribbon Book (2006)
Printz Award Honor Book (2006)
Deutscher Jugendliteraturpreis [translate: German Youth Literature Prize] (2007)
Honour Book, CBCA Children's Book of the Year Award: Older Readers (2002)
Honour Book, CBCA Children's Book of the Year Award: Older Readers (2001) - Short biography
- According to his publisher, Australian author Markus Zusak grew up hearing stories about Nazi Germany, about the bombing of Munich and about Jews being marched through his mother’s small, German town. He always knew it was a story he wanted to tell.
By the age of 30, Zusak had already asserted himself as one of today’s most innovative and poetic novelists. With the publication of The Book Thief, he was dubbed a ‘literary phenomenon’ by Australian and U.S. critics.Markus Zusak (born 23 June 1975) is an Australian writer of German origin. He is best known for The Book Thief and The Messenger (US title: I Am the Messenger), two novels which became international bestsellers. He won the Margaret A. Edwards Award in 2014.
Zusak was born in Sydney, Australia. His mother Lisa is originally from Germany and his father Helmut is from Austria. They emigrated to Australia in the late 1950s. Markus is the youngest of four children and has two sisters and one brother. He attended Engadine High School and briefly returned there to teach English while writing. He studied English and history at the University of New South Wales, from which he graduated with a Bachelor of Arts and a Diploma of Education.
Zusak is the author of six books. His first three books, The Underdog, Fighting Ruben Wolfe, and When Dogs Cry, released between 1999 and 2001, were all published internationally. The Messenger, published in 2002, won the 2003 CBC Book of the Year Award (Older Readers) and the 2003 NSW Premier's Literary Award (Ethel Turner Prize) in Australia and was a runner-up for the Printz Award in America.
The Book Thief was published in 2005 and has since been translated into more than 40 languages. The Book Thief was adapted as a film of the same name in 2013. In 2014, Zusak delivered a Ted Talk, called 'The Failurist' at the Sydney Opera House. It focused on his drafting process and journey to success through writing The Book Thief.
The Messenger (I Am the Messenger in the United States) was published in 2002 and was one of Zusak's first novels. This novel has won awards such as the New South Wales Premier's Literary Awards: Ethel Turner Prize for Young People's Literature.
In March 2016 Zusak talked about his then unfinished novel Bridge of Clay. He stated that the book was 90% finished but that, "... I’m a completely different person than the person who wrote The Book Thief. And this is also the scary thing—I’m a different person to the one who started Bridge of Clay eight, nine years ago ... I’ve got to get it done this year, or else I’ll probably finally have to set it aside." - Nationality
- Australia
- Birthplace
- Sydney, New South Wales, Australia
- Places of residence
- Sydney, New South Wales, Australia
- Map Location
- Australia
Members
Discussions
The Book Thief LE in Folio Society Devotees (October 2024)
The Book Thief LE in Folio Society Devotees (August 2024)
The Book Thief and The Guernsey Litereary & Potato Peel Pie Society in Books Compared (October 2013)
Shared Read: The Book Thief in The 12 in 12 Category Challenge (March 2012)
"The Book Thief" Spoiler-Free Discussion in Hogwarts Express (April 2010)
The Book Thief (with spoileers) in Hogwarts Express (May 2009)
Reviews
It took me twenty years, but this book's steady reputation over that period finally convinced me this might be worth my time. And it was. As others have said, it's a kind of mash-up between Anne Frank and Kurt Vonnegut. The narrator is no less a person than Death himself, who generally takes no notice of the living but does choose to notice one particular young girl whom he sees on three separate occasions, centered around World War II. Young adult fiction usually disappoints me with how show more shallow it is, but this is an exception rich enough to engage any adult. It virtually has to be, filled as it is with the heady topics of war, Nazi Germany, politics, racism and the Jewish Holocaust.
This book carries a lot of emotional weight, so much so that I actually found it heavy going. I didn't like to read more than a chapter or sometimes less before I wanted to put it down again. That of course made it take much longer than it should have and only prolonged the angst. Fortunately the hard parts are balanced by the hijinks that Liesel and her friend Rudy get up to - the stealing of books of course, and other incidents besides. And both of these elements are littered with the bizarre twists that fate often surprises us with.
I could not think of any book I've read that ever brought a tear to my eye, but I can now. The heaviest anvils of emotional weight strike in the final chapters, and Zusak was wise to foreshadow them. It's similar to the weight one feels when your pet dies and you wonder, why does anyone put themselves through this? Why read books like this? But these things hurt precisely because they capture beauty so well, and tragedy is only the other half of life. Even death itself can't make sense of this contrariness, so how can we expect to? show less
This book carries a lot of emotional weight, so much so that I actually found it heavy going. I didn't like to read more than a chapter or sometimes less before I wanted to put it down again. That of course made it take much longer than it should have and only prolonged the angst. Fortunately the hard parts are balanced by the hijinks that Liesel and her friend Rudy get up to - the stealing of books of course, and other incidents besides. And both of these elements are littered with the bizarre twists that fate often surprises us with.
I could not think of any book I've read that ever brought a tear to my eye, but I can now. The heaviest anvils of emotional weight strike in the final chapters, and Zusak was wise to foreshadow them. It's similar to the weight one feels when your pet dies and you wonder, why does anyone put themselves through this? Why read books like this? But these things hurt precisely because they capture beauty so well, and tragedy is only the other half of life. Even death itself can't make sense of this contrariness, so how can we expect to? show less
What if [b:The Outsiders|231804|The Outsiders|S.E. Hinton|https://i.gr-assets.com/images/S/compressed.photo.goodreads.com/books/1442129426l/231804._SY75_.jpg|1426690], but four times as long and ten times as slow? I started it because I liked both Zusak's other books, and I love nonlinear storytelling. I was into it for a chunk in the middle, mostly Michael's and Penny's backstories. I finished it because I wanted to know what the "big secret" was and the writing style meant I couldn't just show more flip to the end. I do not recommend you do the same, if you are wondering whether you should finish it. I can imagine people who would call this book "achingly beautiful," and if you are one of them, you will know right away.
For me, it was eye-rolling-ly over-written romanticizing of a bunch of boys who never learned how to just. talk. to. each. other. This is a type of family that exists, absolutely, but I do not need to read a 550-page book of ponderous one-sentence paragraphs and overwrought references to The Iliad and The Odyssey whose ultimate conclusion seems to be that the most beautiful way to be a boy is to shove your tragedies deep inside you and deal with them only through violence, punishingly hard labor, and women who exist only to patiently wait for you to get your shit together. UGH. show less
For me, it was eye-rolling-ly over-written romanticizing of a bunch of boys who never learned how to just. talk. to. each. other. This is a type of family that exists, absolutely, but I do not need to read a 550-page book of ponderous one-sentence paragraphs and overwrought references to The Iliad and The Odyssey whose ultimate conclusion seems to be that the most beautiful way to be a boy is to shove your tragedies deep inside you and deal with them only through violence, punishingly hard labor, and women who exist only to patiently wait for you to get your shit together. UGH. show less
When I read The Book Thief by Markus Zusak in 2007, I honestly thought he'd peaked. I assumed nothing he'd ever written before Book Thief, (or would ever write afterwards for that matter) could even begin to compete on that level.
That foolish assumption robbed me of the opportunity to fall in love with The Messenger for eight years more than necessary. That's a bookish tragedy if you ask me and I've definitely learned my lesson.
Markus Zusak is an Australian writing wizard and he captured me show more on the first page of The Messenger with the voice of the main character Ed Kennedy. I was chuckling along with the cadence of his life, his friends and that of his pet dog The Doorman, until something meaningful started to unfold.
If I try to explain what happens, I'm afraid it'll sound absurd, and I can't speak highly enough of this book, so I think I'll keep this review simple.
If you're interested in themes of why we're here or how we can make a difference, Ed Kennedy will take you on an unexpected journey that will light up your soul and make you laugh while gently asking you to look at your surroundings - and the people in it - in an entirely new way.
The Messenger is a quick, easy, funny, thoroughly moving and entertaining novel although it carries a powerful message; as the title suggests.
The ending is unique though, and when reading other reviews, it's clear that the readers who 'didn't get' the ending were let down by it, but the readers who did 'get it' are a little in awe; myself included. Whether you enjoy the ending or not is immaterial because Zusak offers an amazingly enjoyable reading experience along the way and it's one of those rare books I'd like to read again in the future. show less
That foolish assumption robbed me of the opportunity to fall in love with The Messenger for eight years more than necessary. That's a bookish tragedy if you ask me and I've definitely learned my lesson.
Markus Zusak is an Australian writing wizard and he captured me show more on the first page of The Messenger with the voice of the main character Ed Kennedy. I was chuckling along with the cadence of his life, his friends and that of his pet dog The Doorman, until something meaningful started to unfold.
If I try to explain what happens, I'm afraid it'll sound absurd, and I can't speak highly enough of this book, so I think I'll keep this review simple.
If you're interested in themes of why we're here or how we can make a difference, Ed Kennedy will take you on an unexpected journey that will light up your soul and make you laugh while gently asking you to look at your surroundings - and the people in it - in an entirely new way.
The Messenger is a quick, easy, funny, thoroughly moving and entertaining novel although it carries a powerful message; as the title suggests.
The ending is unique though, and when reading other reviews, it's clear that the readers who 'didn't get' the ending were let down by it, but the readers who did 'get it' are a little in awe; myself included. Whether you enjoy the ending or not is immaterial because Zusak offers an amazingly enjoyable reading experience along the way and it's one of those rare books I'd like to read again in the future. show less
Holy crap, what the hell Zusak! What is his magic that pulls me in from the first sentence? He has a style all his own and it hooks me every time. And the raw emotion, damn! The ending did throw me a bit, but the more I think about it, it doesn’t bother me at all. He is definitely a top 10 favorite author, if not top 5, and the only confusion there is that I’ve never ranked my favorite authors, but I know he belongs.
Lists
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Thieves (1)
Off on a Quest (1)
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BitLife (1)
READ IN 2021 (1)
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the L2go shelf (1)
A Novel Cure (1)
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Read in 2014 (2)
Best Young Adult (2)
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Five star books (2)
Magic Realism (2)
Grim Reaper (1)
Big Jubilee List (1)
Best War Stories (1)
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Have read (1)
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Holocaust (1)
Europe (1)
Evan's Wish List (1)
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Jewish Books (1)
Leídos 2025 (1)
Awards
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Associated Authors
Statistics
- Works
- 24
- Also by
- 3
- Members
- 63,853
- Popularity
- #222
- Rating
- 4.3
- Reviews
- 2,710
- ISBNs
- 527
- Languages
- 32
- Favorited
- 201





































































































