ana reviewed Anne Frank: The Diary of a Young Girl by Anne Frank
Anne Frank: The Diary of a Young Girl
Every person should read this at least once in their lifetime
audio cd, 8 pages
Published May 25, 2010 by Listening Library.
Het Achterhuis is de titel van het dagboek van Anne Frank (1929-1945) voor het eerst uitgegeven op 25 juni 1947. Het is genoemd naar het onderduikpand Het Achterhuis op de Prinsengracht en is het verhaal van een ondergedoken jong Joods meisje ten tijde van de Tweede Wereldoorlog. Het is wereldwijd een van de meest gelezen boeken. Sinds 2009 staat Annes dagboek op de Werelderfgoedlijst voor documenten van UNESCO.
Also contained in: Works of Anne Frank
Het Achterhuis is de titel van het dagboek van Anne Frank (1929-1945) voor het eerst uitgegeven op 25 juni 1947. Het is genoemd naar het onderduikpand Het Achterhuis op de Prinsengracht en is het verhaal van een ondergedoken jong Joods meisje ten tijde van de Tweede Wereldoorlog. Het is wereldwijd een van de meest gelezen boeken. Sinds 2009 staat Annes dagboek op de Werelderfgoedlijst voor documenten van UNESCO.
Also contained in: Works of Anne Frank
Every person should read this at least once in their lifetime
What better book to take in than this classic memoir of two years spent within the four walls of a secret annex? Of course I came to this book knowing about its reputation as a moving and spirited account of the down to earth details of what it was like to hide from the Gestapo and SS, and about the tragic fate of everyone described. It lived up to all of this, with the tremendously sympathetic personality of Anne and of the others she sheltered with shining in every entry. The philosophical passages too, where she thinks about her future, about ethics, and about the violent conflict surrounding her added to the spell. I was surprised what a coherent narrative these pages turned out to be, largely without editing of the events and personalities, and can see how it represents a literary achievement as well as its historical significance. The …
What better book to take in than this classic memoir of two years spent within the four walls of a secret annex? Of course I came to this book knowing about its reputation as a moving and spirited account of the down to earth details of what it was like to hide from the Gestapo and SS, and about the tragic fate of everyone described. It lived up to all of this, with the tremendously sympathetic personality of Anne and of the others she sheltered with shining in every entry. The philosophical passages too, where she thinks about her future, about ethics, and about the violent conflict surrounding her added to the spell. I was surprised what a coherent narrative these pages turned out to be, largely without editing of the events and personalities, and can see how it represents a literary achievement as well as its historical significance. The inconveniences this year has imposed on me are insignificant in comparison to the deprivation she underwent, making the essential optimism even more striking. The tragedy of her death hit me the way I imagine it would affect anyone with an open heart.
The audiobook reading I listened too was a very old one originally issued on cassette tapes, complete with instructions to fast-forward and turn the recordings over to the second side. The narration by Susan Adams was first-rate. When I was born the events were about twenty five years in the past, not that long as I see it now, and I wonder how it will be for children of today to experience this account now that ninety years have passed since the war began.
3.5 the play is better