Name: Jayden Rothel
August 13, 2007 01:55 PM | Location:
Response: Anne Frank, Adolf Hitler, The Holacaust, and World Warll are the most fascinating people and things I have ever learned about. It is just awful and heartbreaking what all of the Jews went through. For any one who would liketo learn more about all of the trouble the jews went through, I suggest the book, "Anne Frank and I". It is such an amazing book. When you read it, you can not help but feel for the jews and the hell that they went through. You can find it in the teen section of Borders or Barnes and Noble. I highly recommend it. I hope it captures the of you as much as it did me. |
Name: Daysi Franco
August 05, 2007 11:26 PM | Location:
Response: I read all the Anne Frank books that i possibly could find. Anne Frank relates so much to me she seems like my sister. Well its like when i read her book its like am reading my own sisters letters. I dont have a sister. i always wanted one. But when i read Anne Franks stories i feel am not alone i feel like she is right there talking to me. Why? well, because her stories have dialogues so its like she is chatting to me. I started to read her books, when i was 11 i did not love reading but- my friend was reading the book somehow i got interested. And got attached to the book i could read it over and over. But i asked my teacher for more Anne Frank books. When i was in kinder and second grade i loved to write but somehow when i got older i lost interest in writing. I know am not a writer and i did not care before but i did when i got wiser. So i said to my self Anne Frank did not consider herself as a writer, although i did. Now am 13 and i have two diaries filled with memories and long time dreams,love,and passion for the thongs i want and love. Although one of my diaries is from the past when i was 6 or 7. The other one that i have is from the present. That i am still continously writing right now. Anne Frank has inspired me in so many ways. I also hope my diary can be found many years from now. But not when am alive when am resting in peace and thousand of people have discovre my diary. Anne Frank and i we are really simmilar i alwasy wanted to write/act-and maybe-just maybe even:SING!!! Love, Daysi Franco |
Name: carols
August 02, 2007 07:54 PM | Location:
Response: I think the first time l read annes diary l was so moved and sadden that her life had to end so soon. It is great that her diary was found and published because she is a talented writer. Her emotions and dreams were so positive, that it shows that she had a great soul. I think l will never forget reading her diary. |
Name: vanya
July 31, 2007 11:07 AM | Location:
Response: when i read the entry where she had written that the british could win the war, i became so hopeful that she would survive. although i know that she is dead its so hard to believe it. when i read the last entry i felt i could save her or do anything for her. i wanted to tell her that,"anne its just a few more weeks and then you would be free." but alas! its too late. i m 17 but i related to anne so much that i saw her as a living being who was reading her diary to me in person. oh! how i wish anne was alive today. |
Name: Cindy
July 28, 2007 08:36 PM | Location:
Response: I read Anne Frank book when i was in high school. I am now 58 years old and the book still is in my mine. Anne was a very wonderful person and one of God's angels now and people should take note to her book. If ever she knew the way of peace she did from her heart and of the faith she had in people. How sad to think of her dieing thoughts of what evil in people who did all what they did to her and the others who died in those camps. My mother was born the same year as Anne and to think of all the wonders she could of done for all and the world if she had lived!!. But her book did it all and to this day still touching so many people and hearts. May you be in peace my Child. |
Name: Sarah
July 11, 2007 05:55 PM | Location:
Response: When I first read the diary I was 11(12 now).I finished in a week. It was impossible to put down. Afterwards, I thought about her and other holocaust victims. She was 13 to 15 when she wrote it,but she she sounded much older. I won't ever forget this book. |
Name: Lynsie
July 10, 2007 01:20 AM | Location:
Response: Anne Frank was the reason why I began to write and read. She was the reason why I now want to do something with my life. I feel like doing something for a memorial, because I feel like after reading so many of books on Anne Frank I somehow feel like I know her. It was amazing and every word she had written made me feel extremely into it. :) |
Name: trevor #2
July 08, 2007 04:39 PM | Location:
Response: I first started this book one day at around noon and ended up reading the whole thing that day. |
Name: Max
July 02, 2007 03:45 AM | Location:
Response: I'm 17 and just read the diary for the first time. To be blunt, the diary shattered me. I felt as though I had been punched in the stomach and spent hour upon hour trying to recapture my breath. I found that the source of my altogther unusual (I consider myself fairly levelheaded) response was the incredible depth with which anne presents herself. In history, we tend to characterize, or more aptly caricutarize, people based on their circumstances. If someone spent their life suffering, we lament their unfortunate situation and cast them as the sufferer. If someone spent their life in victory and success, we commend them for their accomplishments and cast them as the hero. But anne, rather uncomfortably as I saw with my reaction, doesn't fit into any of our templates: she does not submit to suffering or inflate her accomplishments. She is no less proud of her insecurities than she is of her talents for language or writing. In the end, it is her comfort with herself that stirs our deepest compassion and admiration. "Why don't I refuse to fit in?" we ask. We all see some part of ourselves in anne because she refused to let any one of those parts of her perish. I thank anne, with utmost gratitude, for writing this diary. She has rewritten what it is to be human and for that we are always in debt. |
Name: Trevor
June 28, 2007 11:15 AM | Location:
Response: I first started this book one day at around noon and ended up reading the whole thing that day, i couldn't take my eyes off it. It was marvelously wonderful and showed great enterpretations of what had happened under Adolph Hitler rule. The book was very compelling and i recommend it to all young adult readers. |