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Night Father

 

            The novel Night Father, by Carl was a non-fiction. In the book, Carl tells stories her dad told her about the consecration camps. She tells of people hiding in attics or closets. But they kept hope that things would get better.
             For instance, people in hiding were forced to hide in terrible places, but none worse than a concentration camp. Some hiding in attics like Carl's father, some in places like closets. Also they did not get much food while they were in hiding, and what they did get was more than they ever get in the camps. They kept up the hope that things would get better.
             Another example is one prisoner, nick-named Willie Hammer, beat his fellow prisoners with a ping-pong sized piece of metal on a chain. I think that the prisoners should have stuck together, instead of being a turncoat, and helping the Nazis. They just put up with it and kept hope that things would get better.
             Yet another is that all of the people in the concentration camps were so confused when they were liberated, that they almost wished they were back, but they still trudged onward. I also think that the families of the freed prisoners were hysterical trying to find each other, not knowing if their efforts were wasted. They might be dead, the might be in another country, or even if they were caught. No body knew anything about one another. But the war was over, that's all that mattered. Even through this chaos, they kept up hope that things would get better.
            


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