Night is a story written by a Holocaust survivor, Elie Wiesel, and based it off of his own experience during the Holocaust. It is a true story, and it teaches about what everyone did at Auschwitz. The Boy in the Striped Pajamas is about Bruno, who is the son of a Commandant. Bruno doesn’t know anything about the Holocaust, and throughout the novel, he questions Auschwitz. He eventually meets Shmuel, who is a Jew on the other side of the fence and tries to tell Bruno what goes on on his side. The two books have totally different point of views. Bruno is a naive 8-year-old, and Elie was a 15-year-old boy in the Holocaust. Many people argue whether or not if The Boy in the Striped Pajamas is a good teaching tool for students. Night is a better …show more content…
Elie Wiesel tells about his own experience as a victim of the Holocaust, and what they did at the camps. As a reader, we learn more about the Holocaust because the story came from an actual survivor. Unlike The Boy in the Striped Pajamas, you get more details on the events that happened during the Holocaust. In the Boy in the Striped Pajamas, you didn’t get into the details of what really was going on in Auschwitz because of Bruno’s naivety. When you read from a Holocaust survivor’s point of view, you experience everything that happened, and what they had to go …show more content…
When you sugarcoat a topic like the Holocaust, you don’t tell the bad details and exactly what happened, so you shouldn’t even write about it because kids will think the Holocaust wasn’t that bad. They won’t understand and learn about all of the terrible events that happened during the Holocaust. Because the book was written to be a fable, John Boyne basically wrote the book only with the characteristics of a fable. He mostly wrote it to highlight what makes us human, and to teach a moral. He didn’t write it to teach kids about the Holocaust, or he would've told of what happened and everything the Jews went through. The book is also unrealistic. We read in Night when someone tried to sneak into a place and they never saw him again, and he was probably shot. Shmuel came back with the striped pajamas, and in reality, if he tried to take clothes, he wouldn’t have come back alive. This all shows that The boy in the Striped Pajamas works for Literature, and not