Night records Elie Wiesel’s internment at Auschwitz, and it raises questions about God’s and humanity’s respective roles in the death camps. Today’s literary critics and theologians, however, highlight Wiesel\u27s gift for story-telling of his theology and miss the quality of the writer’s individual works. Tending to group all of the author\u27s Holocaust stories to illuminate a particular theme, they have failed to recognize that Wiesel’s theology in Night is manifest only when they perceive that there is meaning in [it, which] comes only when the elements that go up to make that thing appear in their relatedness. They do not see that Wiesel\u27s text is a memoir rather than a short story or autobiography, and that the meaning of Night i...