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ANNE FRANK by Linda Elovitz Marshall

ANNE FRANK

The Girl Heard Around the World

by Linda Elovitz Marshall ; illustrated by Aura Lewis

Pub Date: Sept. 15th, 2020
ISBN: 978-1-338-31229-4
Publisher: Orchard/Scholastic

Anne Frank’s story of confinement for several years after the Nazi takeover of the Netherlands, including her tragic death, is simply but accessibly told.

Marshall introduces Anne as an individual. “As a baby, Anne cried. LOUD. As a toddler, she was silly and made everyone laugh. And as a little girl, she spoke her mind.” Marshall intersperses this account with brief historical interludes. An image of Anne and her friend throwing water on people from a balcony is indicative of her happy early childhood, but by 1940 the Nazis invaded the Netherlands. When she receives her diary for her 13th birthday, the text notes that Anne “wrote about new rules that stopped her—and all Jews—from riding bikes, going to movies, playing in public parks, and attending public schools.” Children will understand how these restrictions would change life immeasurably. Marshall chronicles the Franks’ time in the Secret Annex with short, poetic sentences about what Anne wrote. The flat illustrations show Anne with her dark hair and intense eyes in happy and sad times, the lack of depth emphasizing Anne’s confinement. History is reflected on several pages with darker palettes that include maps to help readers understand the proximity of Germany to the countries it conquered. The last spread celebrates Anne’s legacy.

This brief biography makes Frank’s writing an effective introductory focus for young readers.

(afterword, timeline, author's note, sources, bibliography, websites) (Picture book/biography. 7-9)