Talk:Sarah's Key (novel)

Standard Hasidic Pedo--phile Picture
This historical fiction features multiple tweens naked as the subversive adornment for defending a juvenile manslaughter case where a young girl (Sarah) devoid of the adult socio-political facts, detains her own younger sibling in a Freudian do-or-die fantasy where she is unchallenged as still being the doted upon baby as evidenced on the early fight scene between them. Afterwhich, she meets authority, sees her opportunity via their power, and ultimately seizes upon it to extinguish her own brother, to be guilt ridden to the point of suicide in an otherwise artificial narrative where an actual story of the French holocaust should have stood. She feared, hated, and wished to confine her baby brother, and as a result he died. And any rational US court would have remanded her to juvenile authorities despite the context her motives were clear, except where compelling Hollywood narrative devoid of jurisprudence exist in which the only victims were obviously consistent with the fact less narrative that is holocaust theory, where genuine crimes exist but could never be enough to motivate the hatred they racially desire. This girl committed manslaughter, and everyone else is to blame but her. — Preceding unsigned comment added by 174.21.191.77 (talk) 03:09, 19 February 2023 (UTC)

Made minor changes - Julia's daughter Zoe's description as rebellious would be inaccurate. She is portrayed as a deep and insightful child who is Julia's support. Also expanded on William Rainsferd's character description. JazzlynLiggins (talk) 00:20, 10 November 2016 (UTC)

Hi! There is a discrepancy between the French and the English article of this book. In the French article it's said that the French first edition has been published in 2007 (not in 2006) and has been translated by Agnès Michaux from the original English version. I prefer not to edit anything since I don't know exactly what is the write data. — Preceding unsigned comment added by 85.230.141.162 (talk) 21:41, 3 December 2019 (UTC)