46 pages • 1 hour read
Morris GleitzmanA modern alternative to SparkNotes and CliffsNotes, SuperSummary offers high-quality Study Guides with detailed chapter summaries and analysis of major themes, characters, and more.
“You know how when you and two friends jump off a train that’s going to a Nazi death camp and you nearly knock yourself unconscious but you manage not to and your glasses don’t even get broken but your friend Chaya isn’t so lucky and she gets killed so you bury her under some ferns and wildflowers, which takes a lot of strength, and you haven’t got much energy left for running and climbing?
That’s how it is now for me and Zelda.”
Then begins in medias res, picking up where the narrative of Once concluded. Felix and Zelda are only 10 and 6 years old, respectively, but they have already endured enough trauma for a lifetime and have been forced to make adult decisions in order to survive. However, Felix demonstrates a determination and strength of moral character that carries him through the tumultuous events of the novel.
“I say a silent prayer to Richmal Crompton. I ask her to protect our friends who are still on that terrible train. Please don’t let them end up in a pit too.”
Richmal Crompton is Felix’s favorite author of children’s literature. Felix’s “prayers” to Crompton are a motif that runs through the series, serving as a reminder of the fact that Felix is still a child with naïve, childish views, despite the premature maturity that is forced upon him. The desperate elevation of his favorite author to near-godlike status also demonstrates his need to cling to whatever shreds of his former life he can manage to preserve. In this context, his subsequent theft of the Richmal Crompton book is entirely justified.
“Nailed to the side of the cart, right next to my face, is a tattered paper notice with printing on it. At the top is one word in big letters.
JEWS.
I read the rest of the notice.
Reward, it says. For each Jew captured and handed over. Two hundred (200) zloty and one (1) bottle of vodka.
Suddenly I’m not hungry anymore. I’m thinking clearly again. This is why the man wants to take us to town. To get a Nazi reward.”
The flyer on the turnip farmer’s wagon demonstrates the perilous situation Felix and Zelda are in. Although the farmer, Mr. Krol, ultimately proves to be friendly, Felix’s instincts are not necessarily misguided. During this time frame, there are many Polish people who are sympathetic to Nazis and who would eagerly turn the children in to obtain such a reward.
“Suddenly I understand. Zelda must have left the locket in our burrow. So she doesn’t have to think about her parents being Nazis.”
The central conflict that Felix must urge Zelda to face is to reconcile her memories of her parents with her fierce hatred of Nazis. The depths of her anger toward her parents’ Nazi affiliations is powerfully reflected in her willingness to risk her life by claiming to be Jewish in order to stay with Felix; this action also shows how loyal she is for someone so young.
“My face is burning. Not from the water, because I’m standing up and it doesn’t even reach my knees. My face is hot because Genia is staring at my private part like it’s the most annoying thing she’s ever seen.”
Male circumcision is a common Jewish religious practice. Unfortunately, it is also physical evidence that Felix is Jewish, putting him in constant risk of discovery. As she bathes Felix, Genia recognizes that Felix can try to blend in, but if someone were to see him nude, there would be nothing he could do to conceal the truth of his heritage.
“‘Are you good at stories, Felix?’ asks Genia.
‘Yes, he is,’ says Zelda. ‘He’s very good. ’Specially funny ones and sad ones.’
‘Excellent,’ says Genia. ‘Because from now on you both have to tell people a story about yourselves. How you’re two Catholic children from Pilica. How your parents were killed. How you’ve come to stay with your aunty, who from now on is me.’”
Genia decides that the best option for the children is to hide in plain sight by adopting aliases and false backstories. This tactic holds many risks, however, because Felix and Zelda must portray these alternate identities as authentically as possible in order for the ruse to work. While Felix is good at telling stories, he does not like lying, and Zelda’s hatred of the Nazis makes it difficult for her to stick to her new role.
“I’m shocked. Killing innocent children just to get their bedrooms.
I’m also shocked to hear that the kid with the knife is Jewish. A Jewish orphan whose friends are all dead except for Leopold.
I wish I’d known that.
Perhaps me and Zelda and the chickens could have been a bit friendlier.”
The Nazi’s murdered the orphans in order to use the orphanage as a headquarters for the Hitler Youth and the Nazi soldiers. The orphan who entered the barn likely escaped the massacre somehow. Genia also reveals that the orphans were used as slave labor by the Nazis and forced to work on local farms even before they were brutally murdered.
“But in the town square there’s something I’ve never seen before.
Big wooden posts with dead people hanging from them.
‘Don’t look,’ says Genia to me and Zelda. She tries to hurry us across the square.
But we are looking. You have to. It’s terrible. The hanging people with ropes around their necks aren’t soldiers, they’re just people. A lady in a green dress. An older lady wearing an apron. Several men in shirts. One in pajamas.”
The Nazis hang anyone caught aiding and abetting Jews in the town square as a gruesome reminder of the consequences of opposing their regime. Seeing this, Felix realizes that these hanged people could just as easily be Genia, and so the boy fully realizes the extreme risk she is taking by helping him.
“My heart jolts.
It’s a Richmal Crompton book. In Polish, just like the ones I used to have, except this is one I’ve never read.
I try to be Wilhelm and drop it back into the crate, but I can’t help it, I’m Felix and I stuff it inside my shirt.”
Seeing the Crompton book tests Felix’s ability to maintain his disguise. Stealing the book may seem out of character for Felix, who is ordinarily honest to a fault, but this moment shows that he is still just a child, despite everything he has gone through, and he is desperate to hold onto this physical reminder of one of the fondest aspects of his former life. As it happens, taking the book will have important consequences for Felix, for he will develop an unexpected bond with Amon, the Hitler Youth boy, and this connection will ultimately save his life.
“He grins at me. And with a small movement of his hand, so the other Hitler Youth can’t see him, he gives me a thumbs-up.
I blink. Did he really do that?
Is he telling me he’s a Richmal Crompton fan too?”
The Hitler Youth boy whom Felix encounters in the town square, Amon, reveals himself to be a Richmal Crompton fan. This scene represents a brief moment of shared humanity between Felix and someone who should be his enemy. Thus, the author demonstrates the capacity for good that all people have, regardless of their outward political affiliation.
“Genia doesn’t understand.
Kids like us don’t forget our real parents.
Not ever.
And until Zelda feels better about hers, she’s going to keep poking her tongue out at Nazis.”
Felix has the advantage over Genia when it comes to Zelda’s situation because of the trauma that Zelda and Felix share and the fact that they are both children. Though Felix is slightly older than Zelda, he is much more easily able to empathize with her point of view than Genia. He understands that Zelda’s tendency to misbehave in the presence of Nazis stems from her own inner conflict concerning her parents’ Nazi affiliations.
“Cyryl is looking me right in the eye, his wet lips gleaming. I can see exactly what he’s thinking.
He’s hoping I’ve got a Jewish private part.
He can’t wait to show the Nazi soldiers.
If my pants come down, we haven’t got a chance. The Nazis’ll take me into town and kill me on a post. Same with Genia for hiding me. And Zelda doesn’t stand a chance either. Even Nazi kids get executed if they protect Jews.”
Cyryl demonstrates the cruelty of someone raised with antisemitic views. Rather than minding his own business, he is determined to expose Felix as a Jew, even though it would mean that Felix, Zelda, and Genia would all be hanged for it. Because Cyryl’s attitude is a result of his upbringing, his cruel behavior indicates that his parents are likely dangerous and untrustworthy as well.
“We stand with our arms around each other for a long time, and I don’t ever want to stop because I’m so lucky to have a family like Zelda and Genia.”
Protecting family members is Felix’s main motivation in Then, and this tendency demonstrates his big heart and great capacity for love despite all he has experienced. Having lost his own family of origin, Felix develops a strong bond with Zelda and Genia, who serve as important substitutes; he would do anything to keep them safe.
“For a moment everything else seems to stop. But only for a moment. Now the water is exploding again, as loud as before.
‘Don’t,’ I yell at the kid.
But I can’t hear my own voice, so I’m sure he can’t either.
The kid’s arms twitch and the Nazi soldier falls forward onto the riverbank.
My head is ringing, and my glasses are covered with spray. The kid is just a blur now, but he seems to be bending down, reaching for something.
When I finish wiping my glasses, he’s gone.
So has the grenade bag.”
The reappearance of Dov, the Jewish orphan from the barn, is a reminder that the cycle of violence can also be perpetuated by people who are oppressed and victimized. Felix tries to resist the temptation to seek revenge, not wanting to become like the orphan. For now, he still believes in altruism and the essential goodness of humanity, although the climactic events of the novel will sorely test those beliefs.
“Genia is staring at me with the expression people get when somebody has dug a hole in the floor of their barn and they don’t understand why.
‘It’s for Zelda,’ I explain. ‘I mean Violetta. An emergency hiding place. In case the Nazis come for her. I’ve made it big enough so she can lie down. We can put straw in the bottom and Leopold’s kennel over the top.’”
When Felix sees Dov kill a Nazi soldier, he panics and believes that the other soldiers will come for Zelda. The secret shelter he digs is only big enough for one person; in his fear for his surrogate sister, he completely forgets about himself, demonstrating his own selflessness in the face of grave danger. In an instance of tragic irony, however, the end of the novel shows that he is the one left hiding in the shelter.
“‘Felix,’ she says, ‘after Genia’s husband gets here, what if he doesn’t want us?’”
Gabriek poses a risk on which Felix had not counted. Though Genia claims that Gabriek will be sympathetic to the children’s plight, there is a very real chance that he will send them away in order to keep Genia safe. Felix knows by now that war forces people to make hard, cruel decisions.
“‘I wish Richmal Crompton was in charge of Germany instead of Adolf Hitler,’ he says quietly. ‘If she was, I wouldn’t have to be in the Hitler Youth. You and me, we’d both be at home with our parents. I wouldn’t be sleeping in a dead kid’s bed.’”
Amon Kurtz shows Felix that not everyone on the Nazis’ side is inherently bad. Many of the Hitler Youth boys, for example, were likely forced to participate by their parents. Like Felix, Amon is a child forced into a bad situation—though Felix’s circumstances are much more dire.
“Just when I think he’s not going to touch it, he suddenly picks up the pencil and starts drawing. Not with careful little movements like Zelda does when she draws. With big violent slashes. Sometimes he tears the paper, but he keeps going.
Me and Zelda and Genia watch.
He’s drawing a pit in the ground. I recognize what it is. The children’s grave. There are lots of people lying in it and lots of people standing next to it and lots of Nazis shooting them.
A drop of liquid splashes onto the paper.
It’s a tear.”
Dov’s tragic story gives Felix new insight into the boy’s violent hatred for the Nazis. This scene therefore represents an example in which storytelling—through drawing—proves therapeutic. The act of drawing the tragedy allows Dov to release the emotions he has kept pent up inside him ever since his parents’ and friends’ deaths.
“‘This is me and my mummy and daddy,’ says Zelda. ‘We’re not Jewish, but we still love each other.’
I smile at her.
‘I’m glad,’ I say. ‘I’m glad you’re not cross with your mummy and daddy anymore.’
Zelda is looking sadly at the picture.
‘They couldn’t help being Nazis,’ she says quietly. ‘I couldn’t tell them not to, I was too little.’
I give Zelda a hug.”
Dov inspires Zelda to finally explore her emotions concerning her parents. This act of reflection allows her to forgive them, but, more importantly, it allows her to forgive herself. Her realization that she was too young to tell them not to be Nazis reflects Genia’s earlier statement that children are not responsible for who their parents are.
“Halfway to the door, I stop and go back to the table and find a clean piece of paper and write something else.
The story of Zelda and Genia and their loving hearts.
It’s the most important story I’ve ever written, and it’s very easy to write because it’s already come true.”
“‘I’m Gabriek,’ says the man, standing up in the hole. ‘Genia’s husband. I got here in the middle of the night. When I looked through the window and saw somebody in bed with my wife, I…’
He doesn’t finish the sentence, but I know what he’s trying to say. In wartime, with people being killed every day, a lot of people end up in bed married to other people’s husbands and wives.
‘I decided to wait till morning,’ says Gabriek, ‘to find out who this person was and…’
‘It was me,’ I say. ‘And Zelda. Genia’s been protecting us.’”
“Then I see Zelda and Genia.
I pray it’s not really them. I pray that any second they’ll come up behind me and give me a hug and Zelda will tell me off for having smudgy glasses and not being able to see clearly.
She won’t.
Because I can see clearly. Even with smudged glasses. Even with tears.
Oh, Zelda.
Oh, Genia.
The breeze turns them gently, and now they’re facing me.”
Seeing his new family dead nearly breaks Felix. However, he has overcome the denial he constantly faced in Once, and he quickly accepts the fact of their deaths. In a crucial inner turning point, he quickly channels his sorrow into a need for revenge, accelerating the novel to its violent conclusion.
“‘This was in your sister’s coat,’ he says. ‘Wilhelm, I’m sorry.’
I take it from him.
A locket.
Not silver like Zelda’s. A gold one.
It’s open. Inside each half is a tiny drawing. A boy on one side, a girl on the other. They’re facing each other. Under the girl is the letter Z. Under the boy is the letter F.
I stare at it.
My birthday present.
I stare at it for a long time.
Then I take my hand off the grenade in my pocket.”
Seeing the locket and hand-drawn pictures from Zelda saves Felix from becoming like the Nazis by exacting his revenge. Felix knows that Zelda would not want him to harm anyone, not even the people responsible for her death. Felix’s caring, altruistic side ultimately overcomes his rage and need for revenge.
“I’ve kept it strong by telling the story of me and Zelda in my head as I lie here on the straw. It’s what I do all day. It’s how I’m keeping my promise to Zelda. It’s why I decided to live.”
By keeping Zelda’s memory firmly in his mind, Felix keeps his promise never to leave her. He lives on so that she can live on as well. Felix therefore uses his faith in The Power of Storytelling to keep Zelda and Genia’s memories alive.
“‘She was only six,’ I’ll say, ‘but she had the loving heart of a ten-year-old.’
And if people carry on hating each other and killing each other and being cruel to each other, I’ll tell them something else.
‘You can be like her,’ I’ll say. ‘Don’t you know anything?’
Let’s see what they do then.”
Zelda’s catch phrase, “Don’t you know anything?” shows that it is evident, even to a child, that people should choose to be good to each other. Felix recognizes that Zelda is wise beyond her years, but what he does not recognize is that he has gained his own sense of wisdom as well. Felix will live on in the hope that others may follow Zelda’s example if they just hear her story.
By Morris Gleitzman
Action & Adventure
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