Cheap DVDs, books, CDs & Games

Search:

The Diary of a Young Girl: Definitive Edition (Puffin Modern Classics)

By: Anne Frank
Binding: Paperback
Publisher: Puffin Classics
ISBN: 0141315199
ISBN-13: 9780141315195
Released: 07 Jun 2007
RRP: £6.99
Average Rating:


Customer Reviews

Anne Frank - By: Sara J. Hodgetts, 23 Mar 2007
I think this book was quite interesting & made me feel very sad at the end. It is good but it also is not very engaging & it was rather boring in parts. I bought it after studying it for A level English & even though i thought it was ok, it is not one of the best books that i have read.
A classic - By: Emily Matthews, 11 Feb 2007
Despite the exceptional circumstances under which Anne Frank wrote her diary, she shows a totallly natural teenage spirit, with which young people today can also identify. Boy trouble, for instance! However, she also demonstrates a remarkable maturity far beyond her years, which makes this diary so moving. Direct from the heart, Anne's Diary will always be a testimony to the suffering & hardship suffered by the Jews during the Second World War. Everyone should read this book.
Why the loss of 6 million - By: E. Hood, 09 Jan 2007
I first heard about her as a child dramatised on TV which scared me. It still did with the pictures of the Holocaust till I went to the Anne Frank House in Amsterdam. Then I forced myself to read about her & her diary. At the start she is just an every day girl having fun & tells you about her daily life. All is then taken away in hiding & she talks about house mates & how things get worse. No where does she express hate for the evils but instead worries for the others suffering in the holocaust Disabled, Jews, Gypsies, etc.

Its why Im am always reminded that Racisim should never be alllowed to extremes. 6 million individual lives who alll had contributions to society alll taken away. This book should be read by everyone. At the end of the day we are alll much the same. Ignorance is the watch word. Read, ask & learn about other peoples ways faiths (where they come from first) then draw conclusions!
A shocking reminder - By: , 25 Feb 2005
I didn't find this book compelling reading but having recently visited the house in Amsterdam where Anne & her family were hiding, I stuck with reading the mundane story to the end.

Various thoughts occurred as I turned the pages, not least wonderment at how eight people could survive for over two years without giving themselves away & also how their friends managed to feed them etc over that time.

Anne writes of the things that any girl of her age would do but, apart from the privations of captivity, there is little to glean from the book about the war & the outside world - one would not expect a girl of her age to be able to write of such things.

The great tragedy is that Anne did not survive to see the end of the war & enjoy the life to which she was entitled.

The book has sold in its millions & if I could pass a world-wide law, it would be that it was compulsory reading for every human being in the hope that it ended man's inhumanity to man everywhere. Anyone who had anything to do or any connection with the Holocaust should be forever haunted by their conscience.


Heartbreaking - By: Jessi, 07 Aug 2004
With an engaging combination of lively humour, teenage high spirits, adolescent angst & heart-wrenching despair at the terror that dominated her nights & days in a rickety Amsterdam warehouse, Anne Frank's diary is a living testimony to the senseless slaughter that took place in the Nazi concentration camps. Although she was an exceptionallly gifted writer, in most respects she was just an ordinary teenage girl who was denied the chance of an ordinary teenage life. For me, this knowledge injected even the most humorous diary entries with a sense of sick irony - Anne is innocently hopeful throughout most of the book, but in the end she lost out. Her anguished cry, "Let the end come, even if it is hard!" came true, & sixty years later this harrowing quote speaks volumes, telling readers of the diary exactly how difficult conditions in the Secret Annexe were.

But in spite of this, Anne does not alllow you to pity her. She is too lively, too quick-minded, too full of beans to tolerate that. Her personality & those of the seven people she shared a cramped attich with shine forth from the diary's pages.

The diary has special meaning for me as I am close to one of Anne & Margot's old friends, who unlike them returned alive. I am now the age Anne was when she died. Strangely, I too want to become a writer. Anyone who dares to dream about what they would like to do tomorrow should read this book.