The humanity of those characters, like yous sating in both books, is some it's a great lesson for life in general. There's so many unloved le again, not emotion just emotionally unloved. And u we all can look around us see those people. Ask em how they're doing. Pay any kind of attention to those people that are neglected, that don't fit in. I think it's a supremely good good deed that we often fail to enact.
In his memoir of his time in Auschwitz, Primo Levi describes Jewish prisoners bathing in freezing water without soap--not because they thought it would make them cleaner, but because it helped them hold on to their dignity. For poet and author Dwayne Betts, Levi's description of his fellow inmates' suffering, much like the novelist Ralph Ellison's portrayal of early twentieth-century black life in America, is much more than bearing witness to the darkest impulses of mankind. Rather, Betts tells EconTalk host Russ Roberts, both authors' writing turns experiences of inhumanity into lessons on what it means to be a human being.