My friend Anne Frank The inspiring and heartbreaking true story of best friends torn apart and reunited against all odds

Hannah Pick-Goslar

Book - 2023

"Firsthand account of a Holocaust survivor who knew Anne Frank."--Kirkusreviews.com.

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Bookmobile Nonfiction 940.5318/Frank Due Nov 12, 2024
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Subjects
Genres
Autobiographies
Biographies
Published
New York : Little, Brown Spark 2023.
Language
English
Main Author
Hannah Pick-Goslar (author)
Other Authors
Dina Kraft (author)
Edition
First North American edition
Physical Description
313 pages, 16 unnumbered pages of plates : illustrations (some color) ; 24 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references (pages 311-313).
ISBN
9780316564403
  • Prologue
  • 1. Berlin
  • 2. Amsterdam
  • 3. New Friends
  • 4. Arrivals
  • 5. Invasion
  • 6. Aftershocks
  • 7. The Noose
  • 8. Deportation
  • 9. Westerbork
  • 10. Limbo
  • 11. Bergen-Belsen
  • 12. Anne
  • 13. The Lost Train
  • 14. Liberation
  • 15. Beterschap
  • 16. Switzerland
  • 17. Ghosts
  • 18. The Promised Land
  • Afterword
  • Dina Kraft's Acknowledgments
  • Elegy for Hannah and Anne's Classmates
  • Selected Bibliography
Review by Booklist Review

Vivacious Anne Frank became shy Pick-Goslar's "very first friend" after their families fled anti-Semitic violence in Berlin and settled in Amsterdam. Pick-Goslar shares vivid memories of her adventures with Anne and their close-knit refugee community, up to the shocking day she entered the Franks' empty apartment and was told that the Franks escaped to Switzerland, a necessary lie. After her mother's death, Pick-Goslar and her remaining family ended up in Bergen-Belsen, and she became responsible for her much younger sister. Pick-Goslar recounts with arresting intimacy the countless horrors she endured, including her devastating final encounters with her dear friend. When Anne Frank's earthshaking diary was published, Anne's father asked Pick-Goslar, who, despite all but overwhelming odds, established a happy life in Israel, to tell her story publicly. She did so for decades, traveling the world. In her final months in 2022, Pick-Goslar worked with journalist Dina Kraft to create this clarifying and resounding memoir. Pair this with the similarly revelatory The Last Secret of the Secret Annex (2023), by Joop van Wijk-Voskuijl and Jeroen De Bruyn. There is always more to tell about the Holocaust.

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

Firsthand account of a Holocaust survivor who knew Anne Frank. Born into a prosperous, middle-class German Jewish family like the Franks, Pick-Goslar fled to Amsterdam after the Nazis came to power in 1933. Born in 1928, the author was the same age as Anne, and since the families lived in adjacent buildings, they quickly became friends and classmates. In the early chapters, Pick-Goslar recounts the carefree activities of two schoolgirls, but the text is imbued with an increasingly ominous background, capped by the brutal German invasion in May 1940. In July 1942, the Franks disappeared, leaving a message that they had moved to Switzerland. In fact, they had gone into hiding in Otto Frank's warehouse, where they remained until they were betrayed in August 1944. Pick-Goslar's family was arrested in June 1943, and they spent six months in a filthy Dutch transit camp before being sent to Bergen-Belsen in Germany. Although not an extermination camp, the conditions were so awful that most prisoners died of starvation or disease after months of suffering. That included the author's entire extended family except a baby sister under her care. During this time, she encountered Anne, already starving and ill, in a neighboring camp. Liberated in 1945, Pick-Goslar moved to Palestine in 1947, became a nurse, and died in 2022 at the age of 93. Co-author Kraft, a journalist based in Tel Aviv, renders a compelling yet disturbing story. Readers will squirm at the Nazis' loathsome behavior and feel disheartened to learn that all advanced Western governments (the U.S. included) denounced Nazi atrocities but turned away Jews fleeing Germany except for those who were wealthy and famous. Holland was no exception, classifying Pick-Goslar's family as "temporary refugees," with the understanding that they would move on. Painful history but a good choice for readers interested in Anne Frank or Holocaust-era memoirs. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.