Read TIME’s Original Book Review for Anne Frank’s Diary

Anne Frank (1929-1945).

W hen the diary of Anne Frank was first published in English, as Anne Frank: The Diary of a Young Girl , a full decade had passed since a young Anne received the fateful journal for her 13th birthday. Five years had passed since the diary had been published in the Netherlands—on this day, June 25, in 1947, as Het Achterhuis —and more than dozen had passed since its author stopped writing down her days.

And yet, despite the passage of time, her story was something new, a different way of understanding the horrors of the Holocaust. “The resulting diary is one of the most moving stories that anyone, anywhere, has managed to tell about World War II,” as TIME’s book reviewer put it, describing the diarist’s experiences:

As the war dragged on and news trickled in of mass deportations of Jews, Anne became desperate. She had terrifying fantasies about the death of Jewish friends. Often she saw “rows of good, innocent people accompanied by crying children [walk] on and on . . . bullied and knocked about until they almost drop.” With appalling prescience she wrote that “there is nothing we can do but wait as calmly as we can till the misery comes to an end. Jews and Christians wait, the whole earth waits; and there are many who wait for death.” When her pen fell into the fire, she wrote that it “has been cremated.” Though not much interested in politics, Anne tried to understand what was happening to the world. “I don’t believe that the big men, the politicians and the capitalists alone, are guilty of the war,” she wrote. “Oh no, the little man is just as guilty, otherwise the peoples of the world would have risen in revolt long ago! There’s in people simply an urge to destroy, an urge to kill, to murder and rage, and until all mankind, without exception, undergoes a great change, wars will be waged …” But sometimes she cried out from the heart, as if for all the Jews of Europe: “Who has inflicted this upon us? Who has made us Jews different from all other people? Who has allowed us to suffer so terribly up to now? It is God that has made us as we are, but it will be God, too, who will raise us up again.”

Many more decades have passed by now—this year marks the 70th anniversary of Anne Frank’s death at Bergen-Belsen—and her father’s decision to execute her wish to have her diary published continues to prove significant. According to the Anne Frank House , it has since been published in 70 languages.

Read the full review, here in the TIME Vault: Lost Child

World War II Erupts: Color Photos From the Invasion of Poland, 1939

Refugees near Warsaw during the 1939 German invasion of Poland. (Sign reads, 'Danger Zone -- Do Not Proceed.')

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book review of anne frank diary

Book Review

Anne frank: the diary of a young girl.

  • Autobiography , Drama , Historical

book review of anne frank diary

Readability Age Range

  • Doubleday, a division of Random House

Year Published

This book has been reviewed by Focus on the Family’s marriage and parenting magazine .

Plot Summary

From June 1942 to August 1944, a Jewish girl named Anne Frank kept a diary of her experiences in Amsterdam, the capital of the Netherlands, after the Netherlands fell to Nazi control during World War II.

Anne begins her diary entries by talking about her 13th birthday party, the day when she received the diary. Anne says she is keeping a diary because she doesn’t have any true friends and feels alone, despite having a loving family. She does not feel that she can confide in her parents or her 16-year-old sister, Margot, although she cares for them. Anne decides to give her diary a name, Kitty, and to write to Kitty as if the diary is the close friend she has always wanted.

Anne provides information about the social situation in Amsterdam. The Nazi party of Germany has extended its influence to Amsterdam, and Anne’s family is subject to a series of laws restricting the behavior of Jews. Anne is disheartened by the restrictions, but she still finds enjoyment by spending time with her friends.

In July of 1942, Anne’s family receives a call-up notice for Margot, which means that Margot will either be imprisoned or taken to a concentration camp. Rather than send Margot away with the SS (the German defense corps), the entire family decides to go into hiding.

Miep and Jan Gies are non-Jewish friends of the Frank family, and they help hide the Franks in secret rooms in Otto’s office building. Only four workers remain in Otto Frank’s office, and all of them are aware of the Franks moving in. Anne calls the hidden rooms the “Secret Annex.” The Franks share the space with another Jewish family, the van Daans, who have a 15-year-old son named Peter.

Many small domestic disagreements characterize the Franks’ and van Daans’ life in hiding. Mrs. van Daan does not want to share her linen sheets with the Frank family, and Mrs. Frank does not want to share her china dishes with the van Daan family. Mrs. van Daan avoids doing her share of the housework, and Anne annoys Mrs. van Daan with her constant chatter.

September of 1942 marks the start of Anne’s first school year in hiding. In October, she hears news that all of her Jewish friends and their families have been sent to concentration camps and now live under horrible conditions. An eighth resident of the Secret Annex, Albert Dussel, arrives in November. Anne does not get along with Mr. Dussel, with whom she must share a room, but she treats him with respect to keep the peace in their cramped home.

In the following months, the residents of the Secret Annex try to live as normally as possible, although they constantly fear their hiding place will be discovered. Anne begins to enjoy her studies, particularly Greek and Roman mythology, but interpersonal tensions in the Secret Annex are still increasing. Meals are growing sparser; Mr. Dussel hoards his private stash of food and refuses to share.

June of 1943 brings Anne’s 14th birthday. Her father writes her an encouraging poem, and the rest of the people in the Secret Annex give her small presents. Mr. Voskuijl, a friend of the family, is diagnosed with cancer and can no longer bring news of the outside world to the Secret Annex. In July, the warehouse below the Secret Annex is burgled and many of the Franks’ and van Daans’ food supplies are stolen. Air raids on Amsterdam continue throughout the summer. In September, Anne hears news of Italy surrendering to Allied forces.

In October of 1943, the van Daans run out of money, which further strains the relationships in the Secret Annex and causes the van Daans to fight even more frequently. In January of 1944, Anne begins to have romantic dreams about a boy named Peter whom she used to know, and at the same time she begins pursuing a friendship with Peter van Daan. Gradually, Anne becomes fonder of Peter van Daan, whom she disliked when they first went into hiding. Anne becomes more sympathetic to Mr. and Mrs. van Daan because she realizes her mother is the reason for many of the harsh inter-family squabbles.

In February 1944, Anne learns that Britain may invade the Netherlands. The residents of the Secret Annex discuss what they will do if the Germans evacuate Holland. Anne begins to visit Peter regularly, and the two of them often talk in his room.

In March, Anne reflects on her time spent in the Secret Annex and concludes she has grown into a wiser and kinder person as a result of her circumstances. Anne believes that she was a silly child before she came to the Secret Annex, and she is glad she has grown less superficial. Also in March, one of the men who brings food to the Secret Annex is arrested, depriving them of important supplies.

Peter and Anne’s friendship gradually becomes romantic. Anne worries that her sister, Margot, might also be in love with Peter, but Margot tells Anne that she is not jealous of their relationship. The adults in the Secret Annex tease Peter and Anne about their frequent visits, but they allow them to keep meeting.

Anne begins to make longer entries in her diary, and in late March of 1944, she hears a Dutch radio broadcast which says that after the war is over, diaries and journals kept during the war will be collected as valuable writings. Anne writes with renewed dedication because she dreams of becoming a journalist and knows she must hone her composition skills. In April, there is another break-in at the warehouse below the Secret Annex, and Anne fears they have been discovered. In May, the men of the household expect that England will invade the Netherlands, but the anticipated invasion doesn’t happen.

On D-Day, June 6, 1944, Anne hears a broadcast about the Allied forces landing in Normandy, France. Later in June, Anne celebrates her 15th birthday. She determines that Peter van Daan likes her more as a friend than as a girlfriend, but they remain close and enjoy each other’s company. Mrs. van Daan and Mr. Dussel grow more and more agitated with Anne and argue with her about the flaws they perceive in her character. In August, Anne again grows hopeful the war will end because an attempt has been made to assassinate Hitler. Anne’s diary ends in August 1944, just before the Secret Annex is discovered and its residents are sent to concentration camps.

Christian Beliefs

Anne mentions that the anti-Jewish laws in Amsterdam prohibit Jews from visiting Christian homes. Anne’s father has given her mother’s bicycle to Christian friends for safekeeping since Jews are not allowed to use bicycles.

Mr. Dussel lived with a Christian woman out of wedlock.

Anne says Christians in the Netherlands are also living in fear because many of their sons are sent to fight for Germany.

Mrs. van Daan is prone to exaggeration, and she says she will be baptized as a Christian when the war is over. Shortly thereafter, she says that she wants to go to Jerusalem because she’s only comfortable around other Jews.

Anne’s father decides to buy Anne a children’s Bible so she can learn something about the New Testament. He determines he will need to give it to her on St. Nicholas’ Day instead of Chanukah because stories about Jesus do not seem like an appropriate Chanukah present.

Peter says that life would be easier for him if he were a Christian. He does not plan to convert to Christianity after the war because he would never feel like a true Christian, but he plans to hide his Jewish identity in the future.

Anne quotes a phrase that one Christian’s actions reflect only on that Christian, while one Jew’s actions reflect on all Jewish people.

Other Belief Systems

Anne and her family are Jewish. Anne attends school at the Jewish Lyceum. She describes one of her schoolmates as very Orthodox. Anne says that her family’s life has been full of tension because they’ve been worried about their relatives in Germany, who have been oppressed by the anti-Jewish laws instituted by the Nazi party. Anne says that two Jewish uncles fled to North America after the 1938 Kristallnacht pogrom in Germany.

Anne lists many anti-Jewish laws in Amsterdam. Since 1940, Jews were required to wear yellow stars on their clothing to identify themselves as Jews. They were not allowed to ride bicycles or streetcars or to drive their own vehicles. They were only permitted to shop between 3 and 5 p.m. and were not allowed outside in public between the hours of 8 p.m. and 6 a.m. They were not allowed in movie theaters or other places of entertainment, and they were prohibited from playing sports of any kind. Jewish children were segregated into Jewish-only schools.

Anne’s mother makes Anne read from Jewish prayer books written in German, but Anne is not interested in the prayers and wonders why she must be so devout.

The residents of the Secret Annex have a small Chanukah celebration where they exchange gifts and briefly light a menorah.

Anne says nightly prayers. She once refers to herself as the Benjamin of the Secret Annex, referring to the biblical character that was the youngest of Jacob’s sons.

Anne writes that she sometimes feels God is testing her to make her stronger and turn her into a better person through many trials. Anne prays to God to help her captured Jewish friend Hanneli. Anne wonders whether Hanneli ever truly believed in God.

Anne begins to worry that despite all the hardship she has endured, she still does not have enough faith in God. Anne believes that God is sending her dreams of her old friend Peter to relieve her troubles. Anne says that all frightened, lonely or unhappy people should go outside somewhere and be alone with God and nature for a while. She says that if a person enjoys nature’s simplicity, the person will understand that God wants people to be happy. Anne asserts that God has not forsaken her and never will. She says she is grateful to God for giving her the ability to write and express herself.

Anne longs for the day when she and her family will be seen as human beings and not only as Jews. Anne says that God has allowed the Jews to endure affliction but that He will also lift them up again. God has never deserted the Jews, Anne says.

Anne believes any type of religious belief will keep a person morally accountable for their actions.

Peter mentions that the Jews are God’s chosen people.

The residents of the Secret Annex hold a non-religious celebration of St. Nicholas’ Day.

Authority Roles

Anne says her parents love her. Anne describes her father as the most adorable father she’s ever seen. She says her parents are more interested in her general health and happiness than her academic success.

Anne’s father, Otto Frank, takes special care to provide his family with as many comforts as he can. He transports many of Anne’s favorite belongings to the Secret Annex before they go into hiding. Anne later says that her father understands her completely. Anne adores her father and often feels jealous of his approval of her sister, Margot, who never seems to cause any trouble for the family. Anne says that she tries to model her behavior after her father’s, because he is the person she loves most in the world. When Anne’s father tells her to stop seeing Peter in private, she writes him a spirited letter telling him to leave her alone and allow her to make her own decisions. Her father tells her that he does not deserve to be spoken to so harshly, and Anne grows ashamed of her own angry attitude.

While in hiding, Anne feels that she is growing more distant from her mother, who seems to find fault with Anne while treating Margot with extra gentleness and understanding. Anne is embarrassed by the fact that she often bursts into tears when having disagreements with her mother. Anne feels like she is a stranger to her mother, who does not know Anne’s thoughts and feelings on even the most basic subjects. Anne frequently remarks about her mother’s criticism of her, though she rarely mentions what aspect of her behavior has upset her mother. Anne gets so angry with her mother that she writes about wanting to slap her and yell at her.

Mr. Frank suggests that Anne should help her mother more with the household chores, but Anne decides not to help because she despises her mother. Anne says she can easily envision her mother’s death, but she cannot bear to think about her father ever dying. Anne eventually reads her earlier journal entries and is ashamed of talking about hating her mother.

After more than a year in hiding, Anne and her mother go through a brief phase with no major disagreements. Anne attributes their more peaceful relationship to her own maturity and to her mother’s steady nature.

Anne is disappointed in her mother’s assertion that her mother sees her daughters more as her friends than offspring. Anne wishes her mother would not try to be her friend but would instead fulfill a true motherly role and show her a good parental example of how to behave.

Anne mentions that she loves and misses her grandmother, who passed away a few months before Anne received her diary. Mr. and Mrs. van Daan have frequent arguments and sometimes shout at each other. Their son, Peter, seems embarrassed by them. Mr. van Daan yells at Peter when he disobeys.

Mrs. van Daan hits Peter’s arm when he makes a sarcastic remark. Peter hits her arm in return before receiving another punch from his mother. Peter roughly pulls his mother around the room by her wrists to keep her from hitting him again. Mrs. van Daan says that in their old home, she would have hit him with a belt for being so insolent.

Profanity & Violence

Anne says that Peter scoffs at Jesus Christ and takes God’s name in vain.

A rat bites Peter’s arm, and the wound bleeds heavily.

Anne hears that Jews in concentration camps are put to death by poisonous gas. In Amsterdam, the German Gestapo is known for shooting innocent people whenever they cannot find the particular person they are seeking.

Sexual Content

Anne mentions that she has many male admirers at school. Anne has heard rumors that a boy in her neighborhood, Sallie, has already had sex with someone. Anne says that several of the boys in her class have filthy minds, but she does not give examples of their behavior.

The adults are angry when they learn that Peter has read a book intended for adults only. Anne never says if the book has any sexual content, but she refers to the book as forbidden fruit.

Mrs. van Daan wears tight dresses and pats and touches Mr. Frank to flirt with him. Mr. Frank does not respond.

Everyone in the Secret Annex teases Anne for lying down on the same bed as Mr. van Daan, but Anne is quick to say in her diary that she would never want to sleep with Mr. van Daan in the way they were suggesting.

Anne reads a book called Eva’s Youth by Nico van Suchtelen, which contains mentions of prostitutes. The book also mentions menstruation, which causes Anne to long for her own menstrual cycle to start so that she can be a “true” adult. Anne discovers white smears in her underwear. Her mother says this indicates that her period will start soon. Anne wishes she could use sanitary napkins, but they are no longer available for purchase, and she says that her mother’s tampons are not intended for women to use until after they have had a baby. Later, when Anne reads her own early writings, she is embarrassed by her open discussion of such indelicate subjects.

Mr. Dussel is said to have lived with a Christian woman, and their sexual relationship is implied.

Anne is supposed to write new words she learns, and she makes note of brothel and coquette but does not define them.

When Anne enters puberty, she is somewhat self-conscious about the changes in her body, but she is also proud of becoming a woman and says that her monthly period is like a sweet secret. Anne says she has the urge to touch her own breasts. Anne has had discussions about sex with her father, who has told her that she is too young to understand physical desire, but when Anne has romantic dreams about a boy named Peter Schiff, she believes that she understands adult desires well.

Anne writes about spending the night with her female friend Jacque and being curious about her friend’s body, which she had never seen. Jacque refuses Anne’s request that they seal their friendship by touching each other’s breasts, but she allows Anne to kiss her. Anne says that she feels ecstatic when she sees nude female drawings in art books.

Anne says that sex has only been a topic she has heard discussed in hushed and horrified tones. Anne’s mother once told her never to discuss sex with boys, and Anne wishes her mother would give her a more thorough explanation of the facts of life.

In January of 1944, Anne and Peter van Daan begin a friendship tinged with romantic desires. Anne dreams of kissing Peter. By April, Peter and Anne sit with their arms around each other, and Peter kisses Anne’s cheek. They kiss each other’s cheeks several more times before kissing on the lips in May 1944. They spend time alone every evening and always kiss goodnight.

Mrs. van Daan says she has never explained sex or reproduction to Peter, and she assumes that her husband has not. Neither parent knows where Peter has obtained any knowledge of sex. Anne has learned a few details about human reproduction from a sex education book.

Peter shows Anne that his cat Boche is a male by pointing out the cat’s sexual organ. Anne knows the Dutch word for vagina, but neither she nor Peter is sure of the word for penis. Peter says he plans to ask his parents to tell him the word for the male sexual organ.

Anne says that loving someone in the romantic sense will eventually include physical love. She says that if two people are really in love, they do not have to be married so long as they are committed to each other for life. Anne believes that purity before marriage is a silly concept and says that it wouldn’t be a problem for a man to enter a marriage with some previous sexual experience.

Peter is more knowledgeable about sex than Anne is, and she asks him many questions about sex, although she doesn’t discuss his answers in detail. Anne wonders if Peter actually knows how female genitals look because the way he talks makes it seem like he still lacks some key knowledge of the female form. Anne writes about how she used to think that urine flowed from a woman’s clitoris and how her mother feigned ignorance when Anne asked her about what her clitoris was. Anne writes a detailed description of female genitals in her diary, describing how their outward appearance changes while standing and while sitting. Later, Anne describes female genitals to Peter who is surprised to learn the details.

Discussion Topics

Get free discussion questions for this book and others, at FocusOnTheFamily.com/discuss-books .

Additional Comments

Alcohol: Anne receives a bottle of grape juice for her 13th birthday. She comments that it tastes like wine. Anne says that in the Secret Annex, alcohol is only used for medicinal purposes. Mr. Dussel receives a bottle of wine for his birthday.

Smoking: Peter receives a lighter for his 16th birthday, although he does not smoke. Mr. van Daan smokes frequently.

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Book reviews cover the content, themes and worldviews of fiction books, not their literary merit, and equip parents to decide whether a book is appropriate for their children. The inclusion of a book’s review does not constitute an endorsement by Focus on the Family.

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Anne Frank’s Diary, in Graphic Form, Reveals Its Humor

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By Ruth Franklin

  • Jan. 9, 2019

ANNE FRANK’S DIARY The Graphic Adaptation Adapted by Ari Folman Illustrated by David Polonsky 149 pp. Pantheon Books. $24.95.

The story of Anne Frank is so well known to so many that the task of making it new seems at once insurmountable and superfluous. Her “Diary of a Young Girl,” with 30 million copies in print in 60 languages, is one of the most widely read books of the 20th century and, for an incalculable number of readers, the gateway for a first encounter with the Holocaust. Beginning on Anne’s 13th birthday, when she fortuitously received a diary with a red-and-white plaid cover among her gifts, and ending abruptly right before the Franks’ arrest, in early August 1944, the “Diary” chronicles just over two years spent in the “Secret Annex,” the warren of rooms above Otto Frank’s Amsterdam office where the family of four, along with four of their acquaintances, hid from the Nazis. Both a coming-of-age story and a portrait of human psychology under unimaginable stress, it has become justly iconic.

Because of the special circumstances of its creation and publication — Miep Gies, one of the office employees who sustained the Franks by bringing supplies and news from the outside world, gathered Anne’s papers after the family’s arrest and gave them to Otto, the only Annex inhabitant to survive, when he returned from Auschwitz — many readers have treated the “Diary” as something akin to a saint’s relic: a text almost holy, not to be tampered with. Thus the outcry that greeted the discovery that Otto, in putting together a manuscript of the “Diary” for publication in 1947, had deleted whole passages in which Anne discussed in graphic terms her developing sexuality and her criticism of her mother, and the excitement when, in 1995, a “Definitive Edition” appeared, restoring much of the deleted material. Meanwhile, the enormously successful Broadway adaptation of the “Diary” has been severely rebuked for downplaying Anne’s Judaism and ironing out the nuances of her message. “Who owns Anne Frank?” Cynthia Ozick asked in an essay that berates the Broadway adapters for emphasizing the uplifting elements of Anne’s message — particularly the famous quotation, “In spite of everything, I still believe that people are really good at heart” — while insufficiently accounting for her hideous death, at age 15, in Bergen-Belsen.

Into this quagmire bravely wade Ari Folman and David Polonsky, the creators of “Anne Frank’s Diary: The Graphic Adaptation,” a stunning, haunting work of art that is unfortunately marred by some questionable interpretive choices. As Folman acknowledges in an adapter’s note, the text, preserved in its entirety, would have resulted in a graphic novel of 3,500 pages. At times he reproduces whole entries verbatim, but more often he diverges freely from the original, collapsing multiple entries onto a single page and replacing Anne’s droll commentary with more accessible (and often more dramatic) language. Polonsky’s illustrations, richly detailed and sensitively rendered, work marvelously to fill in the gaps, allowing an image or a facial expression to stand in for the missing text and also providing context about Anne’s historical circumstances that is, for obvious reasons, absent from the original. The tightly packed panels that result, in which a line or two adapted from the “Diary” might be juxtaposed with a bit of invented dialogue between the Annex inhabitants or a dream vision of Anne’s, do wonders at fitting complex emotions and ideas into a tiny space — a metaphor for the Secret Annex itself.

The comedy of the “Diary” — one of the book’s most charming and often overlooked aspects — shines in this form. The tension between the Franks and the van Daans, the family with whom they go into hiding (a dentist, Alfred Dussel, joins later), is a rich vein of material for Anne, who sees Mrs. van Daan as obnoxious and vain; she cares only about her own family’s survival and is harshly critical of Anne’s manners and attitude. Here, she is often depicted wearing her trademark fur coat; when her husband threatens to sell it, Polonsky draws its collar with live rabbits, one of which speaks up in her defense. Anne also aims her satire at the limited food options in the Annex, offering sardonic menus and diet tips. In the graphic novel, one spread depicts the families at dinner, each character represented by an animal. Anne’s sister Margot, whose saintly composure she often envied, is drawn as a bird, gazing at an empty plate: “I feel full just by looking at the others,” the thought bubble above her head reads. Meanwhile, Mr. van Daan is an enormous bear, shoveling cabbage into his mouth with both paws even as he demands more.

[ Meyer Levin on Anne Frank’s “The Diary of a Young Girl,” a book too tenderly intimate to be frozen with the label “classic” ]

There are so many wonderful juxtapositions of text and imagery that it feels cruel to focus on only a few, but another consistent standout is the way the graphic novel conveys Anne’s fantasies and emotions — so crucial to the “Diary.” In a line taken almost verbatim from the book, Folman’s Anne wonders, “How can we, whose every possession, from my panties to Father’s shaving brush, is so old and worn, ever hope to regain the position we had before the war?” Polonsky’s accompanying illustration depicts the Franks as beggars huddled on the side of an elegant street lined with cafes and restaurants, while passers-by in fancy clothes — including the van Daans — ignore them. In a page illustrating Anne’s most tumultuous inner thoughts, Polonsky draws her as the figure in Munch’s “The Scream”; for a calmer moment, she’s Adele Bloch-Bauer in Klimt’s “Portrait.” When 16-year-old Peter van Daan and Anne first begin to fall in love, Polonsky depicts their faces reflected in each other’s pupils, as if to indicate the depth of their feelings.

This graphic adaptation is so engaging and effective that it’s easy to imagine it replacing the “Diary” in classrooms and among younger readers. For that reason especially, it seems a mistake not to have included more in the way of critical apparatus to explain the ways the creators diverged from the historical record, especially when they touch most directly on the Holocaust. There is, for example, a naïve, stylized rendering of a concentration camp scene, which makes sense as a representation of Anne’s fantasies — she didn’t know the barbaric specifics of what was going on around her — but risks confusing students, who might not know that Auschwitz wasn’t in fact a big green square surrounded by pleasant-looking buildings with huge canisters reading “GAS” plugged into them.

Folman and Polonsky’s greatest missed opportunity, however, is their representation of Anne. As readers have been aware since the Definitive Edition appeared more than 20 years ago, the “Diary” as we know it, despite its misleading title, isn’t a literal diary. In spring 1944, the inhabitants of the Annex heard a radio broadcast in which a Dutch cabinet minister called for citizens to preserve their diaries and letters as a record of the war years — a moment depicted in the graphic adaptation. Afterward, Anne began to revise what she had written for eventual publication as an autobiographical novel, working at the furious rate of up to a dozen pages a day. She rewrote and standardized early entries and also created new ones to fill in gaps in her story, such as the history of her family. What we have come to think of as Anne’s diary, as Francine Prose and others have written, would be more accurately described as a memoir in the form of diary entries. But myths die slow deaths, and most readers still aren’t aware of the complexities behind the book’s creation.

Folman and Polonsky depict Anne as a schoolgirl, a friend, a sister, a girlfriend and a reluctantly obedient daughter. But only once, at the close of the book, do they show her in the act of writing. In so doing, they perpetuate the misconception about the book that so many have come to know, love and admire — it was, in truth, not a hastily scribbled private diary, but a carefully composed and considered text. As artists, they ought to understand how important it is to recognize Anne’s achievement on her own terms, as she intended it. Their book is brilliantly conceived and gorgeously realized; sadly, it does a disservice to the remarkable writer at its center.

Ruth Franklin is the author of “Shirley Jackson: A Rather Haunted Life,” which won the National Book Critics Circle Award for biography.

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The Children's Book Review

Anne Frank: The Diary of a Young Girl | Book Review

Bianca Schulze

Book Review of  Anne Frank: The Diary of a Young Girl The Children’s Book Review

Anne Frank The DIary of a Young Girl: Book Cover

Anne Frank: The Diary of a Young Girl

Written by Anne Frank

Ages 13+ | 400 Pages

Publisher: Bantam | ISBN-13: 9780553577129

What to Expect: Autobiography, Holocaust, and World War II.

Anne Frank was a young girl with a promising future ahead of her, having moved with her family from Germany to Amsterdam in 1933. She could not have foreseen the hardships that lay ahead for her and her loved ones when the Nazis invaded. They were forced to hide in a small attic with limited resources during World War II’s harsh and challenging times.

Throughout this difficult period, Anne courageously and meticulously documented her family’s journey through her diary, a precious artifact that would later be discovered in an attic in Amsterdam. She captures her family’s struggles, their constant fear of discovery by the Nazis, and the bravery of their helpers. Despite the complex and harrowing circumstances, Anne’s diary is filled with hope and a desire for a peaceful future. Her words and thoughts remind us of the importance of embracing unity and compassion for one another in times of war and beyond.

Anne Frank: The Diary of a Young Girl  is a powerful and emotional read that urges us never to forget the horrors of war and the necessity of striving for peace and love. This renowned classic is a poignant testament to the resilience of the human spirit that should be cherished and experienced by all.

Buy the Book

About the author.

Annelies Marie Frank (12 June 1929 – February 1945) was a German-born diarist and writer. She is one of the most discussed Jewish victims of the Holocaust. Her diary, The Diary of a Young Girl , which documents her life in hiding during the German occupation of the Netherlands in World War II, is one of the world’s most widely known books and has been the basis for several plays and films.

Anne Frank: author head-shot

What to Read After Anne Frank: The Diary of a Young Girl

  • Anne Frank: Her life in words and pictures from the archives of The Anne Frank House , by Menno Metselaar and Ruud van der Rol
  • Number the Stars , by Lois Lowry
  • Inside Out and Back Again , by Thanhha Lai
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Bianca Schulze reviewed  Anne Frank: The Diary of a Young Girl . Discover more books like Anne Frank: The Diary of a Young Girl by reading our reviews and articles tagged with Biography .

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Bianca Schulze is the founder of The Children’s Book Review. She is a reader, reviewer, mother and children’s book lover. She also has a decade’s worth of experience working with children in the great outdoors. Combined with her love of books and experience as a children’s specialist bookseller, the goal is to share her passion for children’s literature to grow readers. Born and raised in Sydney, Australia, she now lives with her husband and three children near Boulder, Colorado.

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Book Review: The Diary of Anne Frank

The Diary of a Young Girl by Anne Frank

The Diary of a Young Girl by Anne Frank

Recently I’ve been listening to the unedited version of The Diary of Anne Frank read by Helena Bonham Carter for the 70th anniversary of the book which was released in 2012.

When this commemorative version of Anne’s diary was released, Meryl Steep also recorded “ a moving video message, sharing with viewers how Anne Frank’s values have shaped her own, including holding on to hope when the world has entered dark times “, which we’ve included here:

Tens of millions have read  The Diary of a Young Girl since it was first published in 1947 and it has been translated into more than 60 languages!

What is it that is so compelling about the diary of a young girl, written between her 13th birthday and when she was arrested with the rest of her family two years later?  This book is her very personal, deeply moving account account of what it was like to be literally hidden away in a secret “ annex ” in her father’s office building in Amsterdam during the Nazi occupation of the early 1940’s. The Frank family lived in hiding from 1942 until 1944 when they were discovered, arrested and taken to prison. Except her father Otto, Anne and her family members who had been hiding, tragically died in concentration camps in 1945 just months before liberation.

In fact, according to the Guardian , “ Amsterdam was occupied by the Nazi regime from 1940-1945, during which time 80,000 Jews were rounded up and deported to death camps. Only 18,000 survived .”

Some of the themes that young Anne writes about during the two years she and her family hid from the Nazis during World War II bring to mind echoes of this year of global coronavirus related lockdowns and quarantines. Of course, the virulent threat from the German regime that causes the Frank family to go into hiding is far more sinister than anything we are experiencing here in the United States. And yet it is Anne’s incredible honesty and vulnerability that allows us to imagine on a very human level, her longing for freedom, for fresh air, and for the chance to fully embrace her potential.

“I must have something besides a husband and children, something that I can devote myself to!  I want to go on living even after my death!  And therefore I am grateful to God for giving me this gift, this possibility of developing myself and of writing, of expressing all that is in me.”

Most of us will thankfully never know the reality of being persecuted, of having to wear an identifiable mark (see below) on your outer garment and  or of living under the threat of being ripped away from all you know and sent to a concentration camp – all of your belongings confiscated – while those who dare resist are often killed on the spot.

According to the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum in Washington D.C., “ Holocaust is a word of Greek origin meaning “sacrifice by fire.” The Nazis… believed that Germans were “racially superior” and that the Jews, deemed “inferior,” were an alien threat to the so-called German racial community. During the era of the Holocaust, German authorities also targeted other groups because of their perceived racial and biological inferiority:  Roma (Gypsies), people with disabilities, some of the Slavic peoples (Poles, Russians, and others), Soviet prisoners of war, and Black people. Other groups were persecuted on political, ideological, and behavioral grounds, among them Communists, Socialists, Jehovah’s Witnesses, and homosexuals. ”

book review of anne frank diary

Jewish People Were Made to Wear Yellow Stars During the Nazi Occupation of Amsterdam

Anne’s diary was originally published by Anne’s Father Otto in 1947, the year his youngest daughter would have turned 18.

Her cousin Bernd Elias (Buddy), commented that, “ when [he] knew Anne, she was a girl like every other girl .” And yet Anne was documenting her pre-teen and teenage thoughts and feelings against a backdrop of increasing horror. One heartbreaking story Anne relates is when Bep, one of the Dutch women who helps the hiding family in a myriad of ways, sees an older Jewish woman thrown half-naked and beaten on her doorstep. She has to deliberately suppress her human response to open her door and rescue the old woman, as doing so would lead to Bep’s own death.

“ Hatred, of course, and racism are still working away all over the world. They are with us. It is so important that children learn to respect all religions and all nationalities .” Bernd Elias’ words ring especially true when considering current situations where some groups around the world are being persecuted, eradicated, and imprisoned for their religious beliefs and cultural identity.

Hearing Anne’s adolescent concerns and longings in the midst of bombings and the daily disappearance of her fellow Jews in Amsterdam causes me to pause and reflect on where other young people in our world today are subjected to this type of injustice. In particular, this story causes me to think about the current plight of Uighur people that Julie Clark talked about in an article for Culture Honey.  It horrifies me to learn of the tactics that the government in China is using against this Muslim minority people form the Xinjiang region of northern China. And yet there are so many accounts surfacing of Uighurs that are being systematically persecuted, imprisoned, tortured, terrorized and yes, even killed. The government is destroying their places of worship and the social fabric that ties them together as families and communities.

Tragically, according to Amy Qin writing in the New York Times , “Nearly a half million children have been separated from their families and placed in boarding schools so far.” “State media and official documents describe us[ing] boarding schools as incubators of a new generation of Uighurs who are secular and more loyal to both the party and the nation.”

Anne Frank's Original Diaries and Short Stories

Anne Frank’s Original Diaries and Short Stories

Thinking about the story of Anne Frank from the perspective of our global climate leads to a large question.

What can we do to ensure the millions of Uighurs detained and imprisoned by the Chinese government will not  suffer the fate of the millions of Jews, like Anne, who senselessly lost their lives?  This is something that Culture Honey founder Georgia Sanders examines in her new article , talking about raising awareness with calls/emails and boycotting certain products.

At one point Anne writes in her diary, “ I have reached the point where I hardly care whether I live or die, the world will keep on turning without me, and I can’t do anything to change events anyway. I’ll just let matters take their course and concentrate on studying, and hope that everything will be alright in the end. ” I can imagine those who created the strategy for the Uighur children covered in the New York Times article quoted above, wish that they would similarly fall into despair.

Many of us who becoming aware of the enormous violence being committed by the government of China in the Uighur community are struggling with a growing sense of powerlessness. The laws have become so draconian that Uighurs in China are being imprisoned for simply practicing their religion (see here ). According to Amnesty International , those Uighurs living in the diaspora are also subjected to tactics of intimidation. However, it is important to remember Anne’s final entry in her beloved diary, “ that in spite of everything I believe that people are good at heart .” Let us together see what love can do. *

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Heidi Pidcoke, a psychotherapist specializing in trauma, completed a Master's in Somatic Psychology from the California Institute of Integral Studies in San Francisco in 1995. Heidi has continued to explore her passion for healing and growth which incorporates the body by studying modalities such as Voice Movement Therapy, Core Energetics and Radical Aliveness. She has lived and worked on several continents including South America, Africa, Europe and North America. Heidi is currently consulting with the UN Institute for Training and Research (UNITAR) while maintaining her clinical private practice. (www.heidipidcoke.com)

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The Story Sanctuary

Anne Frank’s Diary Anne Frank Adapted by Ari Folman Illustrations by David Polonsky Pantheon Books Published October 2, 2018

Amazon  |  bookshop  |  goodreads, about anne frank’s diary.

A timeless story rediscovered by each new generation, The Diary of a Young Girl stands without peer. For both young readers and adults it continues to capture the remarkable spirit of Anne Frank, who for a time survived the worst horror the modern world has seen—and who remained triumphantly and heartbreakingly human throughout her ordeal.

Adapted by Ari Folman, illustrated by David Polonsky, and authorized by the Anne Frank Foundation in Basel, this is the first graphic edition of The Diary and includes extensive quotation directly from the definitive edition. It remains faithful to the original, while the stunning illustrations interpret and add layers of visual meaning and immediacy to this classic work of Holocaust literature.

Anne Frank's Diary on Goodreads

I read THE DIARY OF A YOUNG GIRL for the first time this year. I’d read a play based on the diary and seen it performed while I was in school, but I hadn’t read the original text for myself until now.

One of the reasons I did is because of this graphic adaptation. (Note: the term graphic adaptation simply means it’s told in a series of images in panels, much like a comic strip, but the content is nonfiction, so it’s not a graphic novel.)

Anne Frank’s Diary Banned

ANNE FRANK’S DIARY was banned in at least one high school library in a county near me early in 2023. I read about the content that a parent objected to, but didn’t really have a grid for it since I’d never read the graphic adaptation being pulled or the original diary.

The content the parent objected to is on a two-page spread. There are three images showing Anne and her friend Jacque having a sleepover. Anne asks Jacque if they can show one another their breasts, and Jacque says no. Ann laments that she wanted very much to kiss her friend. The next page shows Anne walking through a garden of vaguely sketched nude statues with a caption that she feels ecstasy at the sight of a female body.

The content is brief and pretty vague, and Jacque even rebuffs Anne. These scenes come directly from Frank’s diary entries.

Anne Frank’s Diary: The Only Graphic Adaptation Authorized by the Anne Frank Foundation

Having read both these books so closely together, I think the graphic adaptation is faithful to the original text and the spirit of it. There were diary entries that I recognized in the graphic adaptation. Sometimes multiple scenes were combined to show one scene. Some of the illustrations show a scene at a dinner Anne describes. At other times, they present a more metaphorical interpretation of what happened. I found that I really enjoyed that combination and the way it illuminated some of the things Anne describes.

Still the Same Sparky, Brilliant Young Girl

The things that stood out to me so much in this book as with the diary itself were how young Anne is. At times, her temper and her emotions get the better of her, as they do with any of us. At other times, she writes with so much humor and depth that it’s hard to remember she was barely a teenager herself.

The man who adapted the book points out in a note at the back of the book that a famous historian once said, “more people are probably familiar with the Nazi era through the figure of Anne Frank than through any other figure of that period, except perhaps of Adolf Hitler himself.”

I had to let that sink in. And I had to think about the fact that we are now telling some high school students they can’t read this book. Or MAUS, the duology written by Art Spiegelman about his father’s life as a survivor of the Holocaust.

It’s very weird to me that there are places in which you can legally drive a car and get a job but not have access to these books at your school.

I’m so glad I read ANNE FRANK’S DIARY: THE GRAPHIC ADAPTATION and the original, DIARY OF A YOUNG GIRL by Anne Frank. The story they tell is a pretty simple one. It’s about a girl who keeps a diary, pretending to write letters to a friend as her family faces prejudice, adversity, and ultimately, their own murders.

I really enjoyed the way the illustrations celebrated Anne’s humor and her wit. And I deeply appreciate that they show the vast range of feelings she describes in her diary. I loved the book, and I would like to check out the movie directed by the adapter of the book .

Anne Frank's Diary on Bookshop

Content Notes

Recommended for Ages  10 up.

Representation Anne, her family, and the others hiding in the Secret Annex are Jewish.

Profanity/Crude Language Content None.

Romance/Sexual Content Anne reports she once asked a female friend if she could see her breasts and wanted to kiss her. She says she feels “ecstasy” when seeing female bodies. She mentions speaking openly with Peter about the bodies of men and women. Kissing between boy and girl.

Spiritual Content Anne’s family celebrates Hanukkah and St. Nicholas Day together.

Violent Content Anne hears rumors of citizens being executed. She hears rumors about people taken to concentration camps and killed there. Anne worries about friends from school and others her family knew. She sometimes has a dream of them asking her for help.

Drug Content Anne takes Valerian drops to combat feelings of anxiety and panic during her time in hiding.

Note:  This post contains affiliate links, which do not cost you anything but help support this blog.

Anne Frank’s Diary: The Graphic Adaptation is a beautifully illustrated adaptation of the original diary telling about Anne’s years in hiding in Nazi-occupied Holland.

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2 responses to review: anne frank’s diary: the graphic adaptation written by anne frank, adapted by ari folman, and illustrations by david polonsky.

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I’ve heard about this but haven’t seen it yet. I think I should find a copy. Thanks for your review.

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Thanks! I thought it was nicely done. I haven’t watched the movie that the illustrator worked on, but I still want to do that, too.

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Summary of The Diary of Anne Frank

artwork contrasting light and darkness to represent hope and despair with a flower in the center

30 Nov Summary of The Diary of Anne Frank

Cover of The Diary of Anne Frank

Thesis: The Diary of Anne Frank stands as a timeless testament to the resilience of the human spirit in the face of unimaginable adversity.

  • Reading Age: 13+

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Buy The Diary of Anne Frank on bookshop.org 

Download the Audiobook on Libro.fm

Plot Summary

The Diary of Anne Frank begins on Anne’s 13th birthday, June 12, 1942, when she receives a diary as a gift. Her entries start off light-hearted, detailing her daily life in Amsterdam. However, the tone quickly shifts as Anne and her family, along with four other Jewish individuals, go into hiding in July 1942 to escape the Nazi persecution. The group hides in the Secret Annex, a concealed area of Anne’s father, Otto Frank’s office building.

Over the next two years, Anne’s diary entries reveal the daily struggles, fears, and dynamics of life in hiding. Her writing is remarkably insightful, blending the typical concerns of adolescence with profound reflections on human nature and the world around her. The diary ends abruptly in August 1944, when the Secret Annex is discovered by the Gestapo. The residents are arrested and deported to concentration camps, where Anne ultimately perishes in Bergen-Belsen in early 1945.

  • The Horrors of War: Anne’s diary is a vivid depiction of the impact of World War II on ordinary people, particularly the Jewish community.
  • Humanity and Compassion: Despite her circumstances, Anne’s belief in the goodness of people remains a consistent theme.
  • Growth and Self-Discovery: The diary chronicles Anne’s transition from adolescence to young adulthood, marked by her introspective and philosophical musings.

Illustration of a cramped and dimly lit attic room, symbolizing the confined and tense environment where Anne Frank and her family hid

  • Anne Frank: The author and main character, Anne is a perceptive, witty, and introspective young girl. Her diary reveals her deep thoughts, fears, and hopes.
  • Otto Frank: Anne’s father, a kind and practical man who is the only member of the Frank family to survive the Holocaust.
  • Edith Frank: Anne’s reserved and caring mother, struggling to maintain a sense of normalcy in the annex.
  • Margot Frank: Anne’s older sister, who is quiet and studious.
  • Historical Significance: Provides a first-hand account of the Jewish experience during the Holocaust.
  • Emotional Depth: Anne’s reflections are profoundly moving, offering a human face to the statistics of war.

Weaknesses:

  • Incomplete Narrative: The diary’s abrupt end leaves readers yearning for closure.  There are other works that tell the continuation of the Frank story. Notably, “The Lost Diary of Anne Frank”

Literary Devices:

  • Symbolism: The annex represents both a sanctuary and a prison.
  • Foreshadowing: Anne’s hopes and plans for the future are overshadowed by the readers’ knowledge of her fate.

Audience Suitability: Best suited for young adults and adults interested in historical, biographical, and war-related literature.

Comparisons: Similar in emotional depth to Elie Wiesel’s Night and Viktor Frankl’s Man’s Search for Meaning .

Recommendation: Highly recommended for its historical significance and emotional impact.

Potential Test Questions

  • What does the diary symbolize for Anne? Answer: The diary symbolizes both a friend and a means of escape for Anne.
  • How does Anne’s view of the world change throughout the diary? Answer: Anne’s view evolves from that of an innocent, carefree girl to a more mature, introspective young woman who is deeply aware of the horrors surrounding her.

Product Details

  • ISBN: 978-0553296983
  • Page Count: 283 pages
  • Publication Data: Originally published in 1947
  • Publisher: Bantam Books
  • Genre: Autobiography, War Diary

Awards and Accolades

  • Listed in the UNESCO Memory of the World Register.
  • Considered one of the most important books of the 20th century.

Anne Frank’s diary, “The Diary of a Young Girl,” has been adapted into several films and plays, reflecting its profound impact and enduring significance. Some notable adaptations include:

  • “The Diary of Anne Frank” (1959): Directed by George Stevens, this is perhaps the most well-known film adaptation. It won three Academy Awards and starred Millie Perkins as Anne Frank. The film is noted for its emotional depth and strong performances.
  • “Anne Frank: The Whole Story” (2001): A TV mini-series that provided a more comprehensive view of Anne’s life, including her time in the concentration camps. It received critical acclaim and several awards, including an Emmy.
  • “The Attic: The Hiding of Anne Frank” (1988): A television film focusing on Miep Gies, one of the helpers of the Frank family during their time in hiding. It offers a different perspective on the story.
  • “The Diary of Anne Frank” (Play): First performed in 1955, this play was written by Frances Goodrich and Albert Hackett. It has been a popular and critical success, often performed in schools and theaters around the world.

Other Adaptations

  • Over the years, there have been various other adaptations in different forms, including animated films, documentaries, and even opera. Each adaptation brings its unique perspective to Anne Frank’s story, emphasizing different aspects of her life and the historical context.

These adaptations have played a significant role in bringing Anne Frank’s story to a broader audience, using the power of visual storytelling to enhance the emotional and historical impact of her diary. They continue to be important educational tools and cultural references in understanding the Holocaust and its human impact.

More About Anne Frank

Anne Frank was a young Jewish girl who became an iconic figure through her diary, written during the Holocaust. Here are key aspects of her life and legacy:

  • Born: June 12, 1929, in Frankfurt, Germany.
  • Family: Daughter of Otto and Edith Frank; had an older sister, Margot.
  • Background: The Frank family was liberal and assimilated into German society. However, as Hitler rose to power, they faced increasing persecution due to their Jewish heritage.

Move to Amsterdam

  • 1934: The Frank family moved to Amsterdam, Netherlands, seeking refuge from Nazi persecution in Germany.
  • Life in Amsterdam: Anne attended a Montessori school and was known for her vivacious and outgoing personality.

World War II and Going into Hiding

  • 1940: Germany invaded the Netherlands, bringing anti-Jewish measures and persecution.
  • 1942: Anne received a diary for her 13th birthday. Shortly after, due to the deportation of Jews, her family went into hiding in a secret annex in her father’s office building.

Life in the Annex

  • Duration: The Frank family, along with four other Jewish people, hid for two years.
  • The Diary: Anne documented her life in hiding, her thoughts, fears, and experiences. Her writing showcased maturity, depth, and a hopeful perspective despite the circumstances.

Discovery and Deportation

  • August 4, 1944: The secret annex was discovered by the Gestapo. Anne and the others were arrested and deported to concentration camps.
  • Auschwitz: Initially sent to Auschwitz, Anne and Margot were later transferred to Bergen-Belsen.
  • Early 1945: Anne Frank died of typhus in Bergen-Belsen, just a few months before the camp was liberated. She was 15 years old.

Posthumous Fame

  • Diary’s Publication: Otto Frank, the sole survivor among those from the annex, found Anne’s diary and decided to fulfill her wish of becoming a published writer.
  • Legacy: First published in 1947, The Diary of Anne Frank has since been translated into more than 70 languages. It provides a unique and deeply personal perspective on the Holocaust and has educated millions about the horrors of war and the enduring spirit of a young girl.
  • Cultural Significance: Anne Frank’s diary humanizes the statistics of the Holocaust, providing insight into the life of a typical teenager in extraordinary circumstances.
  • Educational Value: Her diary is often used in schools worldwide to teach about the Holocaust, the dangers of discrimination, and the importance of human rights.

Anne Frank’s story remains a poignant reminder of the atrocities of the Holocaust and the resilience of the human spirit in the face of oppression and hatred. Her diary continues to inspire and educate people of all ages.

Bookshop.org helps to support independent book sellers. Please purchase The Diary of Anne Frank on Bookshop.org: https://bookshop.org/a/1289/9788177661422

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The Diary of a Young Girl | Anne Frank | Book Review

June 4, 2013

Sankalpita Singh

The Diary of a Young Girl by Anne Frank

“When the world was torn by grief and war. When the Jews were killed in German halls. A group of eight went into secret hiding. To save themselves from atrocities and chiding. A girl of 13 lived it, wrote it all. To tell the world – A forlorn story of her early and unfortunate fall”
“….announcements of their deaths appear in the papers frequently. These outrages are described as “fatal accidents”. Nice people, the Germans! To think that I was once one of them too! No, Hitler took away our nationality long ago. In fact, Germans and Jews are the greatest enemies in the world” – Anne Frank , Friday 9 th October, 1942
“Who has inflicted this upon us? Who has made us Jews different from all other people? Who has allowed us to suffer so terribly up till now?” – Anne Frank, Tuesday, 11 th April, 1944

I am sure many of us would have heard of Anne Frank and her diary which became famous by the name of The Diary of a Young Girl .

If you have heard about her, then I must say that you should read the book if you haven’t done it already.

For those of us who haven’t heard about her, Anne Frank was a girl who lived during World War 2 in Nazi Germany occupied Holland (Now Netherland).

Because of the atrocities of Nazis against the Jews, the family of Anne Frank, along with another Jew family and a Jewish doctor, went into hiding together.

They lived in hiding for 25 months before they were discovered by the Gestapo and sent to the concentration camps to die, where only Otto Frank, Anne’s father, survived.

After the war, he discovered Anne’s diary and got it published by the name The Diary of a Young Girl . This is a 13-year-old’s personal diary in which she has written about her daily experiences in the hiding from 14 th June, 1942 till 1 st August, 1944 a few days before she was discovered by the Gestapo.

This book, as many critics say, is dull and boring because in a majority of the entries she speaks of her trifles with her family – Mom, Dad and sister Margot and with the other family – the Van Daans (name changed).

Critics have said a lot and will say a lot and some of the points they mention cannot be denied.

But I am here to tell you why one should read this book.

The Diary of a Young Girl has great historical value and I believe that this diary is Anne’s gift to the human race and the world, the very world which tore her life apart and couldn’t give her a fair chance at her own life.

In those dark days, she wrote of hope; of how she wanted to be a writer; of how she would never be just another housewife; of how she will treat and bring up her children.

She mentions of love and the time she will be able to see the sun and moon and enjoy the beauty of nature again as it is something which nobody can deny her.

In one of her last entries, she writes about the hope that the war may soon end and she might be able to go to school. It was so sad to read all that because I know how the story ends.

That she had to go is so sad, for she would have been a great writer. When I read about her, the Coldplay’s song “Paradise” comes to my mind.

“When she was just a girl, she expected the world, but it flew away from her reach, so she ran away in her sleep”.

I want to write much more, but space is a major constraint here and in the end, I would just like to quote these words by John F. Kennedy –

“Of all the multitudes who throughout history have spoken for human dignity in times of great suffering and loss, no voice is more compelling than that of Anne Frank”

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ANNE FRANK'S DIARY

The graphic adaptation.

by Anne Frank ; adapted by Ari Folman ; illustrated by David Polonsky ‧ RELEASE DATE: Oct. 2, 2018

A different format distills and renews Frank’s achievement.

An illustrated abridgement of the Nazi-era classic.

Anne Frank (1929-1945) as graphic-history heroine? Adapter and composer Folman and illustrator Polonsky (Animation and Illustration/Bezalel Academy of Arts and Design) worked together on the Oscar-nominated animated documentary Waltz with Bashir . According to Folman, they were approached by the Anne Frank Foundation about adapting the diary into both “an animated film for children” and a graphic novel that would introduce it to a new generation of readers. He then faced a “significant challenge”—to render the whole diary in graphic form might take a decade to complete and some 3,500 pages, while a more manageable “edit” could feature only 5 percent of the original text. Though he opted for the latter course, the abridgment retains the spirit of the whole as the perceptive and increasingly self-aware teenager navigates the usual tensions of adolescence—puberty, romance, family issues—within a nightmarish retreat from the Nazi atrocities intensifying outside their secret hideout. She feels guilty about any everyday cheerfulness she experiences in the face of so much death and destruction, and she succumbs to bouts of depression despite her typical resilience. “Even deep sleep brings no redemption,” she writes. “The dreams still creep in.” Those dreams bring out the best of the illustrations amid the depictions of the everyday confinement in which Anne, her family, and others are hiding. They were captured toward the end of the war, after the end of the diary, when the gas chambers were on the eve of being dismantled. Though she wasn’t aware of her fate, Anne writes with much awareness of not only herself, but a potential readership, with the literary aspirations of someone who feels she has “one outstanding character trait…a great deal of self-knowledge. In everything I do, I can watch myself as if I were a stranger.”

Pub Date: Oct. 2, 2018

ISBN: 978-1-101-87179-9

Page Count: 160

Publisher: Pantheon

Review Posted Online: June 26, 2018

Kirkus Reviews Issue: July 15, 2018

BIOGRAPHY & MEMOIR | HISTORY | HOLOCAUST | BIOGRAPHY & MEMOIR | GENERAL GRAPHIC NOVELS & COMICS | GENERAL HISTORY | GENERAL BIOGRAPHY & MEMOIR

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SEEN & HEARD

NIGHT

by Elie Wiesel & translated by Marion Wiesel ‧ RELEASE DATE: Jan. 16, 2006

The author's youthfulness helps to assure the inevitable comparison with the Anne Frank diary although over and above the...

Elie Wiesel spent his early years in a small Transylvanian town as one of four children. 

He was the only one of the family to survive what Francois Maurois, in his introduction, calls the "human holocaust" of the persecution of the Jews, which began with the restrictions, the singularization of the yellow star, the enclosure within the ghetto, and went on to the mass deportations to the ovens of Auschwitz and Buchenwald. There are unforgettable and horrifying scenes here in this spare and sombre memoir of this experience of the hanging of a child, of his first farewell with his father who leaves him an inheritance of a knife and a spoon, and of his last goodbye at Buchenwald his father's corpse is already cold let alone the long months of survival under unconscionable conditions. 

Pub Date: Jan. 16, 2006

ISBN: 0374500010

Page Count: 120

Publisher: Hill & Wang

Review Posted Online: Oct. 7, 2011

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Jan. 15, 2006

BIOGRAPHY & MEMOIR | HOLOCAUST | HISTORY | GENERAL BIOGRAPHY & MEMOIR | GENERAL HISTORY

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THE PURSUIT OF HAPPYNESS

From mean streets to wall street.

by Chris Gardner with Quincy Troupe ‧ RELEASE DATE: June 1, 2006

Well-told and admonitory.

Young-rags-to-mature-riches memoir by broker and motivational speaker Gardner.

Born and raised in the Milwaukee ghetto, the author pulled himself up from considerable disadvantage. He was fatherless, and his adored mother wasn’t always around; once, as a child, he spied her at a family funeral accompanied by a prison guard. When beautiful, evanescent Moms was there, Chris also had to deal with Freddie “I ain’t your goddamn daddy!” Triplett, one of the meanest stepfathers in recent literature. Chris did “the dozens” with the homies, boosted a bit and in the course of youthful adventure was raped. His heroes were Miles Davis, James Brown and Muhammad Ali. Meanwhile, at the behest of Moms, he developed a fondness for reading. He joined the Navy and became a medic (preparing badass Marines for proctology), and a proficient lab technician. Moving up in San Francisco, married and then divorced, he sold medical supplies. He was recruited as a trainee at Dean Witter just around the time he became a homeless single father. All his belongings in a shopping cart, Gardner sometimes slept with his young son at the office (apparently undiscovered by the night cleaning crew). The two also frequently bedded down in a public restroom. After Gardner’s talents were finally appreciated by the firm of Bear Stearns, his American Dream became real. He got the cool duds, hot car and fine ladies so coveted from afar back in the day. He even had a meeting with Nelson Mandela. Through it all, he remained a prideful parent. His own no-daddy blues are gone now.

Pub Date: June 1, 2006

ISBN: 0-06-074486-3

Page Count: 320

Publisher: Amistad/HarperCollins

Review Posted Online: May 19, 2010

Kirkus Reviews Issue: March 15, 2006

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book review of anne frank diary

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Diary of a Young Girl by Anne Frank - review

Anne Frank Diary

Diary of a Young Girl by Anne Frank is one of the most well read books in the world. Anne Frank was a Jewish girl and at the age of 13 World War 2 broke out. Germans were looking for anyone they did not like everywhere. Anne frank and her family fled to the secret annex in Amsterdam (the capital city of Holland) where they lived there for 2 years in total seclusion.

I really liked Anne Frank because you could see her astonishing bravery, and I liked the way she made it feel happy sometimes and sad some other times. She starts off being happy because she does not know what's really happening. This book was interesting because it is a real diary. My favourite character is Anne because she had a lot of courage.

Anne Frank and her family were killed except for Otto Frank, Anne's father, who later on found her diary and published it, making it a world wide wonder!

The writing style was easy to read. The cover suited the book well because it showed her picture and Anne is the main character of the book.

Read what happened to this young girl and how you can understand more. Read this book… I dare you!

Buy this book at the Guardian Bookshop

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Anne frank: the diary of a young girl.

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  • Parents say (9)
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Based on 91 kid reviews

If you love books (or dont) you MUST read this either way.

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Its important because it was a true story and really happend to anne frank and her family, it's a very nice book...., please read before letting your children read this great- but sexually graphic biography of a young girl, what is wrong with today's kids, look at my username, amazing book--everyone must read.

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Njkinny's Blog

Anne Frank | The Diary of a Young Girl | Book Review

Anne Frank was a 13 year Jewish girl whose diary written during her time in hiding from the Nazis during the Second World War showed the horrifying picture of that time as well the undying strength and positivity of a young girl who still chose to see the beauty in the world and believe in the goodness of people. A girl whose diary entries have given strength, inspiration and hope to generations of readers around the world ever since its release in 1947, read the publication history, summary, main message, best quotes and book review of the Diary of Anne Frank called “ Anne Frank The Diary of a Young Girl ” in this post below.

Quotes and Book Review of Anne Frank: The Diary of a Young Girl on Njkinny's Blog

About Anne Frank: The Diary of a Young Girl:

Title and Author:  Anne Frank: The Diary of a Young Girl Print Length: 354 Pages Publication Date:  1947 Language: Dutch (translated in English and all major languages in the world) Genre:  Diary, Autobiography, Classic, Inspirational

Anne Frank The Diary of a Young Girl Book Review:

As the name suggests, the book was, in fact, a diary written by a thirteen year old Jewish girl, Anne, while she was in hiding with her family from the Nazis during the Second World War. Anne had been gifted this diary on her thirteenth birthday and in it she wrote her thoughts and daily life experiences while she and her family were hidden in the cramped annex of their company office until their discovery two years later. A touching and an eye opening account of their days spent in the annex with meagre facilities, no outside contact and the constant fear of discovery is very innocently described in Anne’s diary.

An informal journal by a little girl, the diary of Anne Frank has since become a major piece of historical importance that presents an unbiased and unhampered picture of the times of the Nazi regime. The sad and grim circumstances that forced an affluent Jewish family to leave their home and go into hiding are beautifully described. The inhuman and cruel treatment of the Jews by the Nazis and the social circumstances of those times are truthfully narrated which help us empathize and imagine the plight of the Jews at that time.

The diary is written in the first person where Anne calls it “Kitty” and addresses her entries to it. Told from the point of view of a young girl, the writing is simple and straightforward giving us an insight into the thought process of Anne who dreamed of peaceful times and like any other girl her age, of boys.

Things I Liked:

A very moving book, I could relate to Anne who doesn’t, sometimes, understand the purpose of all that is happening around her. Never having witnessed and lived in war like times, I can’t fully understand all that she went through but the whole experience left me thankful of the peace that we have. The atrocities and inhuman treatment of the Jews was so shocking that I just couldn’t make myself come to terms with the fact that any human could be so cruel. Very mature and an intelligent girl, Anne had the right to live and make her dreams come true but she was denied that and this was something that saddens and angers. Futile bloodshed that can never be justified left so many people denied their full lives and happiness. 

Thoughtful, touching and sometimes also amusing, her account offers a commentary of Anne’s courage, wisdom, vulnerability, fear and also her hope and dream of a better future that was tragically cut short with her capture by the Nazis.

Although I’m only fourteen, I know quite well what I want, I know who is right and who is wrong. I have my opinions, my own ideas and principles, and although it may sound pretty mad from an adolescent, I feel more of a person than a child, I feel quite independent of anyone.”    Anne Frank Quote from The Diary of a Young Girl

Storytelling:

I laughed, cried and prayed along with Anne while reading this book and although I knew how the book ended yet I fervently hoped for the end to be just like the one Anne had dreamed about. She was hopeful till the end and saw the best in everyone. She was robbed of her dreams, future and a full life all in the name of religion and a wasteful war that could have easily been avoided.

Where there’s hope, there’s life. It fills us with fresh courage and makes us strong again.”    Anne Frank Quote from The Diary of a Young Girl
It’s really a wonder that I haven’t dropped all my ideals, because they seem so absurd and impossible to carry out. Yet I keep them, because in spite of everything, I still believe that people are really good at heart.”    Anne Frank Quote from The Diary of a Young Girl

Conclusion:

A must read for everyone,  Anne Frank The Diary of a Young Girl is an eye opening account of the destruction, pain and misery afflicted on thousands just on the whim of one person. A book that is definitely a priced entry for any reader’s must have book collection, I give  Anne Frank: The Diary of a Young Girl 5 super shiny stars out of 5 and Njkinny recommends this book to all readers above the age of thirteen. Go read this perspective changing book that imparts the important message of staying strong, being positive and that all people have the right to live free irrespective of their faiths and religions. No one has the right to discriminate and deny another living being the right to a happy, equal and free existence.

I wish to go on living even after my death.” Anne Frank Quote from The Diary of a Young Girl

Anne Frank still lives on in the hearts of millions of readers who read her diary and get to know a girl who lived bravely and died bravely. A diary full of wisdom and inspiring words that have given hope, strength and motivation to generations of readers ever since its release in 1947 and that still continues to inspire, this book is a must-read and a perfect gift to give your loved ones. I feel so sad and yet proud of Anne who chose to see only beauty and hope for a happy end even in the darkest moments of her life. Cheers to her and I am so glad I got to know her through her diary. This book is my absolute favourites and deservedly so. Go read it now!

A few more Anne Frank Quotes I Loved:

I don’t think of all the misery, but of the beauty that still remains.”    Anne Frank Quote from The Diary of a Young Girl
As long as this exists, this sunshine and this cloudless sky, and as long as I can enjoy it, how can I be sad?”   Anne Frank Quote from The Diary of a Young Girl
The weak die out and the strong will survive, and will live on forever”    Anne Frank Quote from The Diary of a Young Girl

Also read the Best Anne Frank Quotes that Inspire, give Hope and instill Strength:

Best anne frank quotes that inspire, give hope and instil strength on Njkinny's Blog

Best Anne Frank Quotes from The Diary of a Young Girl that Inspire, give Hope and instill Strength

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6 thoughts on “ anne frank | the diary of a young girl | book review ”.

I haven't read this in so long, I have to pick it up again. Thanks for stopping by my blog. New follower =)

A lovely review NJKinny! I read it as a teenager and it broke my heart too, the fact that I knew how it really ended, but Anne kept on hoping till the end that things would turn out well!

Thanks for following Heather.. Do re read it..This is one of those books that can be read any number of times without any loss in their appeal..:)

Thanks Reet..:) Yeah it is heart breaking and also so inspiring that despite all the hardships Anne was always hopeful..:)

I read this book first when I was in class 8…It had an overwhelming effect on me !…After that I've read this book a dozen times till date.. A nicely done review… 🙂

A inspiring story of a young girl ,its very interesting to read this book. And also it heart breaking but it was very hopeful to read it ….

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book review of anne frank diary

Movies & TV Shows About Anne Frank's Life, Ranked

  • Anne Frank's diary continues to inspire filmmakers worldwide, with adaptations spanning different decades and countries.
  • The story of Anne Frank and her time in hiding during the Nazi occupation of the Netherlands has been portrayed in various movies and TV series.
  • Some adaptations, like "The Diary of Anne Frank" (1959), are highly acclaimed, while others, such as "Love All You Have Left" (2018), face criticism for their execution.

This article contains discussions of concentration camps.

The story of Anne Frank has been portrayed many times since her diary was first published in the 1940s with some versions of her story ranking higher than others. Born in Frankfurt, Germany in 1929, Annelies Marie Frank was a young Jewish girl who kept a diary while she was in hiding with her family during the Nazi occupation of the Netherlands in what she called The Secret Annex. She and her family were eventually discovered in August 1944, and Anne later died with her sister Margot in the Bergen Belsen concentration camp in early 1945 (via Anne Frank House ).

The sole survivor of the Annex, Anne's father, Otto Frank, had Anne's diary published in 1947 and it was a huge success worldwide, particularly with teenage girls. The diary continues to be a bestseller to this day, with film and television adaptations coming from all over the world. From an Italian version that came out in 2009 to an Oscar-winning movie in 1959, Anne's story has continued to inspire millions of filmmakers and actors everywhere.

10 Best Movies About The Holocaust

Mi ricordo anna frank (2009 tv film), starring: rosabell laurenti sellers (anne frank), panna szurdi (hanneli goslar), emilio solfrizzi (otto frank).

This version of Anne's story may not be as well known, but it is one of the few movies on this list to feature scenes in a concentration camp. Following Anne's relationship with her friend Hanneli Goslar, the film jumps back and forth quite a bit to make sure that the entire story is covered. The film even covers Otto Frank years later as he tells his daughter's story to children in a classroom. Unfortunately, the jumping back and forth makes it hard to follow all the action, and unless audiences decide to read a complete biography of Anne Frank, it can be confusing.

The Diary of Anne Frank (1980 TV film)

Starring: melissa gilbert (anne frank), maximillian schell (otto frank), joan plowright (edith frank), james coco (hans van daan), doris roberts (petronella van daan).

Anne Frank's years in the attic inspired multiple movies about her life in the 1980s and this movie was one of the first in the United States. With Little House on the Prairie 's Melissa Gilbert as the titular character and Maximillian Schell as Otto Frank, it is one of the few on the list where the casting does not work for the film. Gilbert's American accent feels out of place in the setting of the film and some of the pronunciations, such as the name of Anne's cat, are way off. The only versions of the film that are available to watch on YouTube have too much background noise.

Love All You Have Left (2018 movie)

Starring: caroline amiguet (juliette forster), sara wolfkind (anne frank), michael christopher shantz (jeff forster), kathleen sheehy (melanie forster).

Love All You Have Left may not be about Anne Frank's story, but it does cover the depths of how losing a child can impact someone's life. It is also one of the only movies that is set during modern times. After she loses her daughter in a shooting, Juliette Forster soon finds out that a girl is hiding in her attic who claims to be Anne Frank. With very stiff acting and camera angles that are repetitive, the movie borders on being disrespectful to Anne's memory. According to Kimber Myers from the Los Angeles Times , the film is " a maudlin drama that inspires eye rolls rather than tears ."

The Attic: The Hiding of Anne Frank (1988)

Starring: mary steenburgen (miep gies), paul scofield (otto frank), lisa jacobs (anne frank), huub stapel (jan gies).

Another adaptation that came out in the 1980s, The Attic: The Hiding of Anne Frank focuses on Miep Gies as the central character. While it may not be the most accurate in terms of how each character looks compared to the real-life version, it is one of the most historically accurate versions made. The Attic: The Hiding of Anne Frank won an Emmy Award in 1988 for the script and has a beautiful music score by Richard Rodney Bennett that accompanies the scenes perfectly. Mary Steenburgen has a long and interesting acting career and this film compliments her ability to act out each scene with grace and poise.

My Best Friend Anne Frank (2021 Netflix film)

Starring: aiko beemsterboer (anne frank), josephine arendsen (hanneli goslar), stefan de walle (otto frank).

This is another film that focuses heavily on Hanneli Goslar's friendship with Anne over the years, including the last time she saw her at Bergen Belsen. It is the first Dutch film made about Anne and is currently streaming on Netflix. The film does not hold back from the realities of living in Nazi-occupied Amsterdam during World War II, which includes a concentration camp scene. While the film goes back and forth from happier times in Amsterdam to the concentration camp reality, it is a strong film with plenty of touching and intense moments that remind audiences to value the friendships they have.

Anne no Nikki (1995 anime film)

Starring: reina takahashi (anne frank), seiko tano (margot frank), fumie kashiyama (edith frank), g kat (otto frank).

One of the two animated films on this list, 1995's Anne no Nikki is an anime film following Anne's story. Similar to other films and TV series on this list, Anne no Nikki follows Anne's story up to the arrest. While there are a few differences in the plot, such as who accompanies Anne to the Annex, this movie tries to stay as loyal to the book as possible in terms of setting. With beautifully painted backgrounds that represent certain moments, Anne's story is brought to life for audiences with sensitivity and emotion. There is no sugarcoating anything and the music also helps balance out the mood.

Where Is Anne Frank (2021 animated film)

Starring: emily carey (anne frank), ruby stokes (kitty).

The second animated film on this list, Where Is Anne Frank follows the tale of Kitty, Anne's imaginary friend and the recipient of the diary entries. Kitty tries to learn where Anne is and what happened to her in modern-day Amsterdam while learning more about Anne's life. The film is a good introduction for children who are learning about Anne Frank in a kid-friendly setting and teaches messages of tolerance and goodwill. Like Anne's real story, the film does not end on a happy note, but it is a good introduction to the diary for children and spreads Anne's message of helping others from a fresh perspective.

The Diary of Anne Frank (2009 TV series)

Starring: ellie kendrick (anne frank), tamsin greig (edith frank), geoff breton (peter van daan), iain glen (otto frank), felicity jones (margot frank).

Starring Ellie Kendrick as Anne, the BBC version of the story follows Anne's life in hiding. While there are brief moments of her life before she went into hiding, the series makes sure to stay true to real life. Kendrick's portrayal of Anne is feisty and kind, just as Anne was in real life. The show stays true to the book and even quotes from the diary on several occasions. All the actors also bear a resemblance to their real-life counterparts, which makes this series one of the best adaptations out there in terms of historical accuracy.

A Small Light (2023 TV series)

Starring: bel powley (miep gies), liev schreiber (otto frank), joe cole (jan gies), amira casar (edith frank), billie boullet (anne frank), ashley brooke (margot frank).

Based on Miep Gies' story, A Small Light shows the reality of what the helpers went through while they were assisting the people in hiding. The series shows how Miep Gies and her husband Jan helped hide the Franks and their friends while trying to live a normal life themselves. While there are a few creative liberties that are added for drama, the series was well received by the public and by critics, even boasting a 100% score on Rotten Tomatoes. The series also shows aspects of Miep's story that are not commonly shown in other Anne Frank adaptations, making this one of the best ones out there.

Anne Frank: The Whole Story (2001 TV film)

Starring: hannah taylor-gordon (anne frank), jessica manley (margot frank), tatjana blacher (edith frank), ben kingsley (otto frank), brenda blethyn (auguste van pels), lili taylor (miep gies).

This film is broken up into two different parts, through Anne's life in hiding and her life in Bergen Belsen. As the film's intro states, Anne Frank: The Whole Story is based on Melissa Müller's biography of Anne and is one of the few films on this list that shows Anne in the concentration camps. There is no sugarcoating anything for drama and the film uses events seen in the diary to help move the story along. With an all-star cast including Schindler's List actor Ben Kingsley as Otto and a then 13-year-old Hannah Taylor-Gordon as Anne, there is a good balance of telling the facts without making it maudlin.

The Diary of Anne Frank (1959)

Starring: millie perkins (anne frank), joseph schildkraut (otto frank), richard beymer (peter van daan), shelley winters (petronella van daan), diane baker (margot frank), ed wynn (albert dussel).

The very first film about Anne Frank, 1959's The Diary of Anne Frank is considered to be the best adaptation of Anne's story . It was an instant success, garnering public and critical praise as well as winning three Oscars. Otto Frank personally approved Millie Perkins to play the title role. There are a fair number of creative liberties to allow for drama, but the film stays with the spirit of the story. While it is one of the longest movies on this list, at exactly 3 hours even with some events being left out, it is a good version of Anne's story and honors her memory in every way.

Sources: Anne Frank House , Los Angeles Times

Movies & TV Shows About Anne Frank's Life, Ranked

BroadwayWorld

Review: THE DIARY OF ANNE FRANK at Open Stage

24th annual production is just as fresh as ever!

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Open Stage presents its 24th annual production of The Diary of Anne Frank beginning  March 19. 

Open Stage is very deliberate in targeting this show to local high schools, and they do an excellent job of conveying the show’s message, themes, and plot to an appreciative, but possibly inexperienced audience.

Areanna Hope Kroll is electric as Anne.  She has a dynamic personality, and makes her character friendly yet fierce.  Kroll’s Anne is the perfect example of the popular quote, “well behaved women rarely make history”.

Michael James Kacey plays a sympathetic Otto Frank , a man who anchors the whole show with bravery, patience, and hospitality.  Kacey’s final monologue was especially poignant.

Gerren Wagner and Leigh Anne Hoes round out the Frank family as mother, Edith and sister, Margot, respectively.  Although neither of these roles are as “angelic” or “obnoxious” as other characters, both actresses convey sincere grace and composure when faced with the chaos around them.  

Ted Hanson and Lisa Leone Dickerson play Mr. and Mrs. Van Daan.  While this couple is notorious for their gruff demeanor and selfishness, both actors conveyed a more genial approach to the script. While this made their characters more realistic, it sometimes diminished the intensity of conflict among the residence of the annex.

Ethan Hammel was an audience favorite as their son, Peter.  Many girls in the audience were swooning when he and Anne exchange an unexpected second act smooch.

Preston Scheffler plays the fussbudget dentist, Mr. Dussel .  I am sorry that his comical tooth-pulling scene was cut.  Dussel is a quirky character, and Scheffler finds humor in his demeanor as much as possible.

Tia Nichole and Matt Golden play Miep and Mr. Kraler, the two helpers who bring news, supplies, and hope to the annex.  Conversely, Phil Narsh, Ron Nason, and Ben Silva have the unenviable task of playing unnamed officers.  Each of these five actors contributed powerfully and uniquely to the events of this important true story.

Director, Stuart Landon keeps the action and blocking simple,  Actors sit in chairs on the side of the stage when not in a scene.  This simplicity and sparseness reflect the living conditions in the annex.

The lighting and sound effects were excellent.  Radio broadcasts, airplane bombings, sirens, and “unidentified things that go bump in the night” were as terrifying. I can’t imagine how exponentially scarier they would be for those who lived through it.

In conclusion, Open Stage has produced an show that is both relevant and entertaining.  It serves as a great theatrical introduction for first time audience members, but has a message of hope and love that can be enjoyed by everyone.  

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“The Diary of Anne Frank” Theatre Review

The month of February provided us with the opportunity to see the play “The Diary of Anne Frank”, which took place from the 8 th -17 th . “The Diary of Anne Frank” takes place in Amsterdam, Netherlands, during World War II. It primarily focuses on the time Anne and her family spent hiding in a secret annex above her father’s office. The play beautifully captures the atmosphere and emotions of that period. It is worth watching if you are interested in historical events or in the powerful story of Anne’s experiences during World War II. As, I attended the play on February 19 th , I was instantly drawn to the scenery as their surroundings, such as the background and props, truly made the play feel real and in the moment.  In addition, their acting was quite amazing, with emotion that was carried throughout the play persistently and effectively. It seemed as if they developed a deep connection within their character, based off their amusing and emotional live performance. I am truly impressed with their skills and everyone who contributed to the creation of the play, I am looking forward to many more plays in the future.

Here's why an Anne Frank graphic novel was pulled from the Vero Beach High School library

book review of anne frank diary

INDIAN RIVER COUNTY — "Anne Frank's Diary: The Graphic Adaptation" was removed from the Vero Beach High School library after Jennifer Pippin, chair of the Indian River County Mom's for Liberty chapter, challenged the book last month.

Why was the graphic novel removed?

The novel was removed because of a scene depicting Frank walking among nude female statues. Vero Beach High School was the only Indian River County school that had the book in circulation.

Pippin argues the depiction is "sexually explicit" and "not a true adaptation of the Holocaust."

More: Graphic novel of 'Anne Frank' removed from Vero Beach High School library after complaint

Martin County removes 80+ books: Bring them back or keep them off? Parents mixed on book removals

List: James Patterson, Judy Blume, Toni Morrison, Jodi Picoult on list of 80 books one Florida school district pulled

The original Diary of Anne Frank features an entry from Jan. 6, 1944, where a 14-year-old Frank writes of asking a friend if she wanted to show each other their bodies, of Frank's desire to kiss her and of her feelings when she saw photos of the statues in her art history book.

The graphic novel is an adaptation of the 1947 "The Diary of a Young Girl," more commonly known as "The Diary of Anne Frank."

The diary chronicles Frank's experience hiding from Nazis alongside her family for two years before being discovered and sent to the Auschwitz concentration camp in 1944. Frank died in 1945 at the Bergen-Belsen concentration camp, mere weeks before the camp was liberated.

Has the Diary of Anne Frank been removed?

"The Diary of a Young Girl" remains on library shelves in Indian River County middle schools and at the Freshman Learning Center.

There is no intention to challenge the original Diary of Anne Frank, Pippin told TCPalm, since "true history needs to be taught."

Gianna Montesano  is TCPalm's underserved communities reporter. You can contact her at  [email protected] , 772-409-1429, or follow her on Twitter  @gmontesano13 . If you are a subscriber, thank you. If not,  become a subscriber  to get the latest local news on the Treasure Coast.

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Anne Frank Remembered: The

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Miep Gies

Anne Frank Remembered: The Hardcover – July 15, 2023

  • Reading age 2 years and up
  • Print length 300 pages
  • Publisher Balaji Publications
  • Publication date July 15, 2023
  • See all details

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The Diary of a Young Girl: The Definitive Edition

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  • ASIN ‏ : ‎ B0CY9GFCJM
  • Publisher ‏ : ‎ Balaji Publications (July 15, 2023)
  • Hardcover ‏ : ‎ 300 pages
  • Reading age ‏ : ‎ 2 years and up

About the authors

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Alison Leslie Gold

Alison Leslie Gold's wide-ranging body of fictional and nonfictional work spans the Holocaust and World War II, alcoholism and other forms of addiction, mental illness, the art of being a painter's muse, and loss and love. Some of her books are aimed at middle-school readers. Miep and Jan Gies, icons of goodness who sheltered Anne Frank, were never willing to have their entire story written until they met Alison. Among those who have singled her out as a protector and chronicler of Holocaust experiences, Elie Wiesel wrote of Gold and "Anne Frank Remembered": "Without her and her talent of persuasion, without her writer's talent, too, this poignant account, vibrating with humanity, would not have been written." Gold has received the Best of the Best Award given by the American Library Association, the Anti-Defamation League's Merit of Educational Distinction Award and a Christopher Award for affirming the highest values of the human spirit, among other awards and prizes. Her books have been adapted for stage and screen and have been translated into 23 languages. Her blog and more information about her work are available at www.AlisonLeslieGold.com.

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  1. Anne Frank: The Diary of a Young Girl by Anne Frank

    Anne Frank: The Diary Of A Young Girl is the real diary of a teenage girl that begins on Anne's 13th birthday (12 June 1942) when she gets a diary. It tells the story of her family who live in ...

  2. Read TIME's Original Book Review for Anne Frank's Diary

    By Lily Rothman. June 25, 2015 7:02 AM EDT. W hen the diary of Anne Frank was first published in English, as Anne Frank: The Diary of a Young Girl, a full decade had passed since a young Anne ...

  3. Anne Frank: The Diary of a Young Girl Book Review

    Our review: Parents say ( 9 ): Kids say ( 91 ): If a novelist were to attempt to invent an authentic young narrator, situation, and story arc, that writer could do no better than the teen Anne Frank did with her diary. ANNE FRANK: THE DIARY OF A YOUNG GIRL is at once instructive, inspiring, and immensely engaging.

  4. Revisiting Anne Frank's Diary

    In 1952, Meyer Levin, the author of "Compulsion," reviewed "Anne Frank: The Diary of a Young Girl" for the Book Review. Below is an excerpt. Anne Frank's diary is too tenderly intimate a ...

  5. Review: The Diary of a Young Girl: The Definitive Edition by Anne Frank

    The Diary of a Young Girl, often known as the Anne Frank Diary, is a collection of entries from Anne Frank's Dutch-language diary, which she recorded while a thirteen-year-old Jewish girl and her family evacuated their house in Amsterdam and went into hiding in 1942 when Nazis occupied Holland. Anne Frank died of typhus at the Bergen-Belsen ...

  6. The Diary of a Young Girl by Anne Frank

    3,715,187 ratings41,397 reviews. Discovered in the attic in which she spent the last years of her life, Anne Frank's remarkable diary has become a world classic—a powerful reminder of the horrors of war and an eloquent testament to the human spirit. In 1942, with the Nazis occupying Holland, a thirteen-year-old Jewish girl and her family ...

  7. The Diary of a Young Girl by Anne Frank

    Anne Frank as you all may well know was a Jewish teenager in World War Two and wrote a diary about her time in hiding. Throughout it, it talks about what it was like to be a Jew in the war and to ...

  8. The Diary of a Young Girl by Anne Frank

    Butterfly Rainbow. Sun 22 Mar 2015 11.00 EDT. Anne Frank, The Diary of ANNE FRANK. I was overwhelmed after finishing this book. Anne's writing had so much depth and feeling that it almost felt as ...

  9. Anne Frank: The Diary of a Young Girl

    Plot Summary. From June 1942 to August 1944, a Jewish girl named Anne Frank kept a diary of her experiences in Amsterdam, the capital of the Netherlands, after the Netherlands fell to Nazi control during World War II. Anne begins her diary entries by talking about her 13th birthday party, the day when she received the diary.

  10. Anne Frank's Diary, in Graphic Form, Reveals Its Humor

    Adapted by Ari Folman. Illustrated by David Polonsky. 149 pp. Pantheon Books. $24.95. The story of Anne Frank is so well known to so many that the task of making it new seems at once ...

  11. Anne Frank: The Diary of a Young Girl

    Book Review of Anne Frank: The Diary of a Young Girl. 2 min. Anne Frank was a young girl with a promising future ahead of her, having moved with her family from Germany to Amsterdam in 1933. She could not have foreseen the hardships that lay ahead for her and her loved ones when the Nazis invaded. They were forced to hide in a small attic with ...

  12. Book Review: The Diary of Anne Frank

    Recently I've been listening to the unedited version of The Diary of Anne Frank read by Helena Bonham Carter for the 70th anniversary of the book which was released in 2012.. When this commemorative version of Anne's diary was released, Meryl Steep also recorded "a moving video message, sharing with viewers how Anne Frank's values have shaped her own, including holding on to hope when ...

  13. The Diary of a Young Girl

    The Diary of a Young Girl, commonly referred to as The Diary of Anne Frank, is a book of the writings from the Dutch-language diary kept by Anne Frank while she was in hiding for two years with her family during the Nazi occupation of the Netherlands. The family was apprehended in 1944, and Anne Frank died of typhus in the Bergen-Belsen ...

  14. The Diary of Anne Frank: Full Book Summary

    However, the Frank family is betrayed to the Nazis and arrested on August 4, 1944 . Anne's diary, the observations of an imaginative, friendly, sometimes petty, and rather normal teenage girl, comes to an abrupt and silent end. Otto Frank is the family's sole survivor, and he recovers Anne's diary from Miep.

  15. Review: Anne Frank's Diary: The Graphic Adaptation written by Anne

    The content is brief and pretty vague, and Jacque even rebuffs Anne. These scenes come directly from Frank's diary entries. Anne Frank's Diary: The Only Graphic Adaptation Authorized by the Anne Frank Foundation. Having read both these books so closely together, I think the graphic adaptation is faithful to the original text and the spirit ...

  16. Anne Frank's Diary: Unveiling the Timeless Story of Courage and Hope

    The Diary of Anne Frank begins on Anne's 13th birthday, June 12, 1942, when she receives a diary as a gift. Her entries start off light-hearted, detailing her daily life in Amsterdam. However, the tone quickly shifts as Anne and her family, along with four other Jewish individuals, go into hiding in July 1942 to escape the Nazi persecution.

  17. The Diary of a Young Girl

    This is a 13-year-old's personal diary in which she has written about her daily experiences in the hiding from 14 th June, 1942 till 1 st August, 1944 a few days before she was discovered by the Gestapo. This book, as many critics say, is dull and boring because in a majority of the entries she speaks of her trifles with her family - Mom ...

  18. Anne Frank The Diary of a Young Girl: The Definitive Edition

    Jump to ratings and reviews. Want to read. Kindle $1.99. Rate this book. ... Want to read. Kindle $1.99. Rate this book. The Diary of a Young Girl, often known as the Anne Frank Diary, is a collection of entries from Anne Frank's Dutch-language diary, which she recorded while a thirteen-year-old Jewish girl and her family evacuated their house ...

  19. Anne Frank: The Diary of a Young Girl

    — The New York Times Book Review "How brilliantly Anne Frank captures the self-conscious alienation and naïve self-absorption of ... If you want to know more about what happened to Anne Frank after the diary, there is a book called "The Last Seven Months of Anne Frank" by Willy Lindwer which includes stories from people who met her in the ...

  20. ANNE FRANK'S DIARY

    The author's youthfulness helps to assure the inevitable comparison with the Anne Frank diary although over and above the sphere of suffering shared, and in this case extended to the death march itself, there is no spiritual or emotional legacy here to offset any reader reluctance. 26. Pub Date: Jan. 16, 2006. ISBN: 0374500010.

  21. Diary of a Young Girl by Anne Frank

    bunkbedbobby. Diary of a Young Girl by Anne Frank is one of the most well read books in the world. Anne Frank was a Jewish girl and at the age of 13 World War 2 broke out. Germans were looking for ...

  22. Kid reviews for Anne Frank: The Diary of a Young Girl

    Funny, thoughtful, and heartbreaking, this book is one of the best I have ever read. Anne Frank is a stunning writer, and her diary is a work of brilliance. It captures the desolation of war and the power of perseverance against all the odds. Despite her extraordinary circumstances, Anne's writing unmistakably reflects also the life of a teenager.

  23. Anne Frank

    A book that is definitely a priced entry for any reader's must have book collection, I give Anne Frank: The Diary of a Young Girl5 super shiny stars out of 5 and Njkinny recommends this book to all readers above the age of thirteen. Go read this perspective changing book that imparts the important message of staying strong, being positive and ...

  24. Diary of Anne Frank Book Review and Ratings by Kids

    Diary of Anne Frank. By Anne Frank. 13 ratings 21 reviews 27 followers. Buy Book. Save Book. Sixty-two years after the publication of the Diary of Anne Frank in Dutch, Aladdin Library is proud to offer its readers the first authorised translations of the book in Arabic and Persian. Anne Frank was born on June 12, 1929 in Frankfurt, Germany.

  25. Movies & TV Shows About Anne Frank's Life, Ranked

    The story of Anne Frank has been portrayed many times since her diary was first published in the 1940s with some versions of her story ranking higher than others. Born in Frankfurt, Germany in ...

  26. Illustrated 'Anne Frank' book pulled from shelves after complaint

    The original Diary of Anne Frank, however, contains a Jan. 6, 1944, entry in which Frank, then 14, relates a story about asking a friend if she wanted to show each other their bodies, Frank's ...

  27. Review: THE DIARY OF ANNE FRANK at Open Stage

    Kroll's Anne is the perfect example of the popular quote, "well behaved women rarely make history". Michael James Kacey plays a sympathetic Otto Frank , a man who anchors the whole show with ...

  28. "The Diary of Anne Frank" Theatre Review

    The month of February provided us with the opportunity to see the play "The Diary of Anne Frank", which took place from the 8 th-17 th. "The Diary of Anne Frank" takes place in Amsterdam, Netherlands, during World War II. It primarily focuses on the time Anne and her family spent hiding in a secret annex above her father's office.

  29. Graphic novel of Anne Frank pulled from Indian River County library

    The original Diary of Anne Frank features an entry from Jan. 6, 1944, where a 14-year-old Frank writes of asking a friend if she wanted to show each other their bodies, of Frank's desire to kiss ...

  30. Anne Frank Remembered: The: Miep Gies: Amazon.com: Books

    The Amazon Book Review Book recommendations, author interviews, editors' picks, and more. Read it now. Similar items that may ship from close to you. Page 1 of 1 Start over Page 1 of 1 . ... A true companion to The Diary of Anne Frank Anne Frank Remembered is a book that, written from the perspective of a compassionate and insightful non-jew ...