
Note: Cover may not represent actual copy or condition available
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The Diary of a Young Girl: The Definitive Edition by Frank, Anne
- Bookseller: j. vint books
(US)
- Seller Inventory #: 001351
- Format: Hardcover
- Book condition: Very Good
- Jacket condition: Very Good
- Binding: Hardcover
- ISBN 10: 0385473788
- ISBN 13: 9780385473781
- Publisher: Doubleday and Company
- Place: New York, Toronto, London
- Date published: 1985
- Size: 6.25 x 8.5 x 1.5 inches
- Weight: 1.15 pounds
- Subjects:
BIOGRAPHY & AUTOBIOGRAPHY / General;
Description
New York, Toronto, London: Doubleday and Company, 1985. A new translation by Susan Massotty; edited by Otto H. Frank and Mirjam Pressler. Appears to be the second printing of the first thus from March 1985. Maroon paper boards bound at the spine in dark maroon cloth; gold lettering on spine only. No markings inside except for a small cartoon drawn on back free end page. Unclipped dj is clean and bright but has some minor bumps. 340 pages.. Hard Cover. Very Good/Very Good. 8vo - over 7¾" - 9¾" tall.
Book summary
One of the most valuable and informative artifacts of the holocaust, THE DIARY OF A YOUNG GIRL is the actual diary of Anne Frank, a German-Jewish girl living in Amsterdam during World War II. The diary begins on June 14, 1942, shortly after Anne's 13th birthday. While initial entries focus on Anne's life at school and her relationships with her friends and family, she does touch on the ever-growing power of the Nazi party and the increasing persecution of Jewish people. In July of 1942, fearing deportation to Auschwitz, the Franks go into hiding in a "secret annex" in the attic of Mr. Frank's former business. Soon after, they are joined by the Van Daan family and a dentist named Mr. Dussel. For over two years, Anne recorded what life was like in the annex--the fear, tension, frustration--and even boredom--of a life lived under very compromised conditions. Much of the diary centers on Anne's difficult, if typically adolescent, relationship with her mother as well as on her crush on the Van Daan's teenage son, Peter. Anne also shares her hopes for her life after the war--and her dream of becoming a writer. In this way, the diary introduces readers to a very typical teenage girl--a girl whose thoughts and emotions put a human face on the almost incomprehensible horror of the Holocaust. First published in 1947 by Anne's father (the only member of the group to survive the war), THE DIARY OF A YOUNG GIRL has since been translated into 31 languages and serves as an eloquent memorial to all those who died in the Holocaust.
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