I picked up Mitch Albom’s The Little Liar wondering if I needed to read another story about the Holocaust. I almost didn’t check it out. We live in a world at war. We live in a world where starvation, strife, and civilian casualties are collateral damage of those wars. Yet war continues to be waged. I am glad I checked the book out. I read it in less than twenty-four hours. A unique voice serves as narrator in The Little Liar. It is Truth. Albom masterfully uses that narrator to explore the meaning of truth and to illustrate the horror of man’s inhumanity to man. Four characters, Nico, his brother Sebastian, Fannie, and Udo pull the reader into the story and demand the reader’s attention from start to finish. In a way, their stories have been told before, but as written, they seem startlingly fresh and compelling. In the context of what’s happening in the world, their stories are more than relevant. Rather than mar the story by retelling it, I want to share what I call the wisdom of Albom. “Never be ashamed of a scar. In the end, scars tell the stories of our lives, everything that hurt us, and everything that healed us.” “But questioning a madman is like interrogating a spider. They both go on spinning their webs until someone squashes them out of existence.” “How could fishing boats keep rolling so innocently? How could the world eat when all those prisoners were starving? How could things look so terrifyingly normal here…?” Why do world leaders create scenarios where these questions still are relevant today? Read this story. Keep asking the question. Why do we still wage war?
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