Castles Burning By Magda Denes

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Castles Burning by Magda Denes was a humourous and tragic read. The memoir starts when Magda is 5 years old. Her father leaves her and her entire family behind and flees to America. Situations start getting worse everyday, World War II breaks out and she and her family hide for nearly 8 years. During those eight years she hides in a oven, her dearest brother and grandfather die, she lives in a basement for several months, not seeing daylight, with a head full of lice. The one thing which I really loved about this memoir was that even though it was about the Halocaust, Denes still managed to recount the funny moments from her childhood. It really interested me in terms of human nature and gave me insight to the extent of violence and suffering …show more content…

Denes father who she never really names is an uncaring father who leaves his family to basically rot in Hungary. I loathe the fact that Magda had to remember his existence and meet him again after suffering through war for nearly 8 years. Even after those 8 years he didn’t care about his daughter all he wanted to say to her was that she was “lucky that you are not going to live here. You can’t imagine the barbarism. The gangsterism that goes on in this city.” This heinous statement surprised me because instead of asking his daughter how she has survived all these years, talk about what a beautiful little lady she has become, he is telling her how lucky she is. About how she won’t have to see gangs, people getting shot and theft even though she has probably seen much worse in the last 8 years where he abandonded her. Her father was a disgusting man and I’m glad that Denes didn’t try to cover it up or not include it in her story because she knew that he was an awful man and her covering it up wouldn’t change how bad of a person he was. This was extremely brave of Denes to write about because most children wouldn’t want the whole world to think bad of their parents, but denes to us the truth and was completely open about …show more content…

Aunt Rozi was Magda’s mother’s sister. She was divorced and was living with Magda’s grandparents since then. Throughout the book there were many instances where Aunt Rozi was incredibly mean and uncaring towards Magda. Most of the time she didn’t even care whether Magda was alive or not. I understand that she would obviously care about her own child more than her sisters however she mostly acted like a stranger to Magda. Though Magda didn’t highlight Aunt Rozī’s hostility, I felt like Magda was quite hurt by it several times. “ My mother visited as often as she could, my brother once a week, Ervin never. Ròzi didn’t allow because she feared that he would be infected.” It was times like these when I was annoyed and fustrated by Aunt Rozi. Aunt Rozi always seemed to think of magda as a liability, as someone who would weigh them down and probably get them killed. Magda was the one who was by Aunt rozi’s side when she found out about Ervin’s, her son, death even though Aunt Rozi showed no remorse for Ivan’s death. Therefore Magda was actually an

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