Author Archives: ennipihl

Death on the Water

Titanic – Death on the Water, published in 2012, is a novel written by Tony Bradman and his son Tom Bradman. It’s a blend of fiction and fact about the sinking of the world-famous, “unsinkable” ship, Titanic. The main character Billy Fleming is fictional but the book is based on facts, so Billy and the story of him could have been real.

Billy is a 14-year-old Irish boy whose father, “Da”, has worked in the shipyard building the hull of Titanic. Billy is expected to follow in his Da’s footsteps, especially after the death of his Da. He’s scared but he decides to leave school and do what he’s expected to – start working on the shipyard for the wage that his family desperately needs for living. As it happens, they’re looking for bellboys to work on Titanic – that’s when Billy nerves himself and takes the job. So the adventure begins.

The story of Titanic is well-known by everyone, so it’s not hard for readers to guess what’s going to happen when Billy starts his job on the ship. Before reading the book, the only question you don’t have an answer to is whether Billy is going to survive or not. When I first started reading Death on the Water, getting that answer was the only thing I was looking for. But as the story went on, it swept me away with it’s realistic narration and it started to feel like I was on board myself with the characters – and the question, whether Billy will stay alive or not, wasn’t the only thing in my mind anymore.

Titanic – Death on the Water gave me a whole new point of view on the story of Titanic. As most of us, I had only seen the 1997 movie of Titanic and it had left me a certain image of the ship and what happened on it. This book, however, told the story from a point of view of a 14-year-old bellboy who wasn’t ready to face that kind of disaster, far away from home and with no one to rely on. It was eye-opening to think about the sinking from a different point of view than I, and most of us, had been used to.

The narration of the book was really gripping and its language was easy to understand. The book is only 130 pages so it doesn’t take long to read it – but in spite of the shortness of the story, it still makes an impression on the reader.

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The Boy in the Striped Pyjamas

In 2006, Irish writer John Boyle published his novel called The Boy in the Striped Pyjamas. Two years later, in 2008, the film of the same name was released. It is a historical drama, placed in the World War II. The film shows Holocaust through the eyes of the main character of the movie, a 8-year-old boy named Bruno.

Bruno’s family relocated from Berlin as the family’s father, a Nazi commandant, had been promoted. Their new home is located in the countryside with not that many residents there. As there are no friends for Bruno to play with, he doesn’t like the new place they  live in – until one day Bruno sees ”a farm” from his window. He decides to find the farm, in hopes that he might find a friend or two to play with. And he finds one, even though their friendship is not quite like the ones he has had before. With the naivety of 8-year-old kids and their innocent way of looking at the world, Bruno and his new Jew friend Shmuel take huge risks together and are willing to do a lot for each other – just like Bruno does when he gets into what he still thinks is a farm and tries to help Shmuel to find his dad. What happens then is one thing that will make you want to either scream or cry.

The Boy in the Striped Pyjamas tells a tragic but beautiful story of friendship and childhood in the world of World War II. One of the main reasons why I think the film is so significant, is the point of view from which it explores the horror of Holocaust. You get to learn about the World War II and the Nazi extermination camps a lot at school and on TV, but you don’t usually get to learn about it in this kind of way. This is the kind of way that really makes you understand how horrible and irreversible the things that happened back then were.

However, that’s not the only thing that makes the film so notable. More than the understanding of the Holocaust horror, you get to see the beautiful innocence that lives in children. At one point in the film Bruno says to Shmuel: ”We’re not supposed to be friends, you and me. We’re meant to be enemies. Did you know that?”. And they both know that, they just don’t understand why. They know we’re all humans and we shouldn’t have to be unequal because of a thing like religion. At the beginning of the film there is a quote by John Betjeman: “Childhood is measured out by sounds and smells and sights, before the dark hour of reason grows.” I think it describes the lesson of the film just as tragically and beautifully as the film teaches it.

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Filed under Films / theatre