Von Linden is a Gestapo interrogator who manipulates Maddie so he can have grip control over her. He treats her like an object who will always listen to his continuous commands. On page 168 it states, “Von Linden came storming in like the Charge of the Light Brigade… while I fell flat on my face on the table in a pool of ink… eyes are very red…” Men during the Holocaust were very dominating and took excessive control over women. Men were and still are thought to be more powerful than women because of their gender. Maddie is frightened of von Linden, who she has to depend on. She was forced to tell him all about her background life, even if she refused to, because she is a woman and has to follow his lead. She never expressed her feelings clearly and experiences pain because of the conditions von Linden puts her into. This makes her hopeless. This is painful because one is manipulated by a dominating character and is inhibited from clearly expressing their feelings. So, Maddie’s pain is restricting her to be courageous and stand up to von Linden to protect herself. Simile helps the reader show how men dominated and manipulated over women during the …show more content…
One of those many homeless people is Maddie. She had to sleep on the busy streets of Europe because she did not have a safe shelter in a nation where she never lived before. She had to use resources on the sides of the roads to protect herself at night. On page 185 it states, “… curled among the cardboard cases and baled wires on the floor… It was like sleeping in the engine room…” People during the Holocaust lived a very tough and risky life. They had very little of value and constantly suffered. The impact of the pain was unbearable that Maddie had to be strong, to believe for the best even all that surrounded her were negative influences. She was mentally unstable and the pain made her feel like she was a failure, because she was not like the others who were happy and had loved ones to support them. Imagery portrays a vivid illustration to the reader to symbolize the pain felt by those who were needy and risked their lives to survive and hoped to unite with their families once