Free Books Max Online

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Max Paperback | Pages: 473 pages
Rating: 4.22 | 2315 Users | 406 Reviews

Present Books To Max

Original Title: Max
ISBN: 2070643891 (ISBN13: 9782070643899)
Edition Language: French

Description In Favor Of Books Max

"19 avril 1936. Bientôt minuit. Je vais naître dans une minute exactement. Je vais voir le jour le 20 avril. Date anniversaire de notre Fürher. Je serai ainsi béni des dieux germaniques et l'on verra en moi le premier-né de la race suprême. La race aryenne. Celle qui désormais régnera en maître sur le monde. Je suis l'enfant du futur. Conçu sans amour. Sans Dieu. Sans loi. Sans rien d'autre que la force et la rage. Je mordrai au lieu de téter. Je hurlerai au lieu de gazouiller. Je haïrai au lieu d'aimer. Heil Hitler!"

Max est le prototype parfait du programme "Lebensborn" initié par Himmler. Des femmes sélectionnées par les nazis mettent au monde de purs représentants de la race aryenne, jeunesse idéale destinée à régénérer l'Allemagne puis l'Europe occupée par le Reich.
Une fable historique fascinante et dérangeante qu'on ne peut pas lâcher. Une lecture choc, remarquablement documentée, dont on ne sort pas indemne

Particularize Epithetical Books Max

Title:Max
Author:Sarah Cohen-Scali
Book Format:Paperback
Book Edition:Deluxe Edition
Pages:Pages: 473 pages
Published:May 31st 2012 by Gallimard (first published 2012)
Categories:Historical. Historical Fiction. Young Adult. Fiction. War. World War II

Rating Epithetical Books Max
Ratings: 4.22 From 2315 Users | 406 Reviews

Criticize Epithetical Books Max
Let me tell you one thing about this book. I won't consider it as a masterpiece, I won't call it a life changing novel (that's why I only gave 3 stars by the way) but I would say without any hesitation that "Max" is a book that will make you think. A lot. First of all, it's the story of Max, actually Konrad, who is a boy born to represent the aryen race at is best, during WWII. Basically, Hitler wanted to create an army of nazis pupets. So, our main character is one of them. We follow his story

This is the story of a child born under the Nazi "Lebensborn" program, which was essentially a program to breed pure Ayran babies who would be the future leaders of the Third Reich. Max is born on April 20, 1936, making him the first baby to roll off the production line. He is also the narrator of this story which covers not just the Lebensborn program but also the abduction and "germanification" of suitably Ayran children from other countries and the lives of ordinary Germans as the war drew to

The ending was a lot stronger than early in the book. Was ready to abandon it with the unnecessary swearing and description.

The narrative structure of this novel did not work for me - right from the beginning with the point of view as Max a foetus it was unbelievable. Perhaps the originality was lost in translation but I found this to be very awkward and unbelievable. An interesting premise about shocking events in history but I could barely finish it.

I received this book for free from the publisher Walker Books in return for a review.Max is the perfect Nazi baby. Born as part of the eugenics programme his blond hair, blue eyes and entire body are perfect. But raised with Nazi ideology and living through the brutality of war, how long can Max cope before reality questions his own beliefs?'Max' is such an amazing and powerful novel it had me gripped, shocked, horrified and even had me crying! Told in the first person perspective throughout,

This is a book that NEEDS to be in every library. I knew about the Hitler Youth movement in Germany during World War II, but I had no idea about the horror of the Lebensborn ("Fountain of Life") programs. In an attempt to breed the perfect Aryan soldier, the Nazis would match S.S. Officers only with the bluest of eyes and blondest of hair with women of the same nordic qualities. If the baby didn't match with predetermined standards, they were "purified"...you guessed it, killed. Not for the

Review coming. Actually a solid book, creepy and awful, but creepy and awful in the same ways as the historical setting it describes. There is a fine balance in how explicit to make such descriptions (Octavia Butler talked a lot about this related to her novel Kindred, about African-American slavery) and I think especially toward the end, Max wobbled in this respect, but I still got through it very fast. It might be too explicit for an American YA audience, I have to think about that. It's not

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