Rating:  Summary: This is a very moving book. Review: Night is a really great book to read. I've read it twice and I would love to read it again. (Now I'm doing a report on it)The first time I read it made me cry. Reading his book made me feel like I was there, witnessing everything. And I wished I was there to help on whatever. So, if you like to read a lot, or you're interested in the Holocaust, you should read this book. You just learn a lot from this book and what you learn from this book, you'll never forget it.
Rating:  Summary: Awakening Review: A good read-- Mr. Wiesel has you there beside him as he goes through a virtual hell on earth. It gives a "bit" of what it must have been like then.
Rating:  Summary: A Powerful book Review: In this powerful book the author, Elie Wiesel takes you through his survival of one of histories most horrific events, the Holocaust. He brings to life many of the unthinkable actions of Nazi Germany. In this, he uses such vivid imagery that he makes you feel as if you were right there beside him experiencing it for yourself. This is the most incredible book I have ever read, and it has inspired me to learn more about the Holocaust.
Rating:  Summary: Emotional roller coaster Review: I feel this book is the best book I have read, yet. From the cover of the book to the actual reading, I could imagine what Elie went through because of the vivid descriptions. This book has made me want to learn more about the Holocaust. No matter what, you should read this book.
Rating:  Summary: Horrifying account of reality Review: The novel Night is more-or-less an autobiography of Wiesel's horrifying experience in a Nazi concentration camp. The book deals with the unbelievable sense of guilt that a young boy feels after surviving the camp when the rest of his family did not. It also deals with the Wiesels loss of faith after being abandond by a God that he trusted in.
Rating:  Summary: I did not like it Review: Hi I am thirteen years old and I would not recomend this bookto anybody of my age group. I found it extremely boring. If you want to read a good Holocaust book try Anne Frank or I Have Lived a Thousand Years.(both good books)
Rating:  Summary: I think Night is the most god-awful book i've ever read Review: Night, while it is a great historical record, comes over to me as grusome, and sadistic as literature gets. This book was like a brain ulcer reading it, and i realy hated every minute of it. After all, if the haulicaust was such a horrible event, which it was, than why make yourself experience it first hand by reading the most realistic and stomach turning books written about that era. If it's WWII books you're reading, go look at The Diary Of Anne Frank. Do NOT read Night, as it will make you want to touch this book only with rubber gloves.
Rating:  Summary: A unforgettable tragedy. Review: This book will not only open your mind but it will open your heart as well. Prepare to cry as you visulize some of the unhuman sites that are put into your head. At times in this book you will find yourself angry, times where you're affraid, times when you feel helpless, and times you feel pain. This book is hard to put down. I read it for the first time a month ago, and I've read it 3 times since. It's simply remarkable.
Rating:  Summary: speechless Review: after reading this work and i am consumed with grief and horror. so many souls were totured and never found relief. the images shared in the book are now burned on my heart. i have read other holocaust accounts, but never been so moved or frightened. my heart breaks when i think so many of so many memebers of my traditon being left to perish with out any final comfort or the Kaddish being said for them. somehow remembering and praying for them now... well, it just doesn't seem like enough.
Rating:  Summary: A inside look at the consentration Camps during World war II Review: The book "Night", by ellie Wiesel, was a book about a boy who became a man much to quickly. He no longer felt pain or suffering. The story of this book is the harsh reality of the war, the hopes people kept, and how they adapted to their new lives.
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