The essence of romantic love is enthusiasm for others. He is depicted as a supporter of love, as Bernhard Schlink loves love, not hate, explaining the positive effect of the relationship and the negative effect of dissolution. Bernhard Schlink uses his novel "reader" to express his feelings about unexpected love among characters, and Hanna and Michael convey the positive and negative effects of their love. Shrink also uses their relationship to show the shape of the love they have in each other.
Bernhard Schlink is the author of the world's best-selling novel "Reader" and four criminal novels "Gaudi, Self-Deception, Self-Management, Self-Slaughter" which is currently translated into English. He is a professor at Benjamin Cardozo Law of School at Yeshiva University in New York. In 1995 he announced a partial autobiographical novel "Der Vorleser" depicting teenagers who were suffering from women in their 30s. During the trial, he again met with law school students on war crimes. This book became the best seller in Germany and America and was translated into 39 languages.
Readers of Bernard Schlink and Arthur Spiegelman's mice are stories about intergenerational conflict as a result of multiple events. But between the Jewish and German generation after the Second World War, guilt, shame and condemnation contributed most to the formation of intergenerational conflict. This led Michael to ask his own question among readers. Can we compare perpetrators, victims, survivors, and their descendants? They are proved to be similar because the guilt of each person brings pain and anger, which leads to conflicts between generations. They all share their knowledge and stories because they believe that everyone is dealing with the atrocities that happened during the war to some extent. But the situation is different. In the case of Michael, "The parents' expectation is that all generations must be freed freely, as these parents did not achieve the expected facts during or after the Third Reich.
Readers of Bernard Schlink are similar to Maus because it is very concerned about the guilt of the postwar generation. The difference is that the child tells the offender that it is not the story of the victim. It does not explain the experience of forming and defining guilt, but provides some explanation as to why the nephew appears in the victims, criminals and their children. This is because it is not compelled to deal with the reality that it is not the main character of the mouse but survives and survives. Artie has been forced to do this everyday for his interaction with his father and his perception of the Semitic heritage. On the other hand, the main character "reader" Michael Berg tells his story and only attempts to objectively summarize past events that he did not participate in. Where he criticized, he often proposed various reasons to explain the cause of the incident.