The Many Lives of Anne Frank by Ruth Franklin audiobook

The Many Lives of Anne Frank

By Ruth Franklin
Read by Erin Bennett

Blackstone Publishing 9780300248128

Unabridged

Format : Library CD (In Stock)
  • ISBN: 9798228296589

  • ISBN: 9798228296572

  • ISBN: 9798228296596

  • ISBN: 9798228460126

Runtime: 12.63 Hours
Category: Nonfiction/Biography & Autobiography
Audience: Adult
Language: English

Summary

Summary

Winner of an AudioFile Earphones Award

A New Yorker Magazine Pick of the Week's Best Books

A revealing biography of Anne Frank, exploring both her life and the impact of her extraordinary diary

In this innovative biography, Ruth Franklin explores the transformation of Anne Frank (1929–1945) from ordinary teenager to icon, shedding new light on the young woman whose diary of her years in hiding, now translated into more than seventy languages, is the most widely read work of literature to arise from the Holocaust.

Comprehensively researched but experimental in spirit, this book chronicles and interprets Anne’s life as a Jew in Amsterdam during World War II while also telling the story of the diary—its multiple drafts, its discovery, its reception, and its message for today’s world. Writing alongside Anne rather than over her, Franklin explores the day-to-day perils of the Holocaust in the Netherlands as well as Anne’s ultimate fate, restoring her humanity and agency in all their messiness, heroism, and complexity.

With antisemitism once again in the news, The Many Lives of Anne Frank takes a fresh and timely look at the debates around Anne’s life and work, including the controversial adaptations of the diary, Anne’s evolution as a fictional character, and the ways her story and image have been politically exploited. Franklin reveals how Anne has been understood and misunderstood, both as a person and as an idea, and opens up new avenues for interpreting her life and writing in today’s hyperpolarized world.

Editorial Reviews

Editorial Reviews

“A vivid cultural history that advocates for a reevaluation of Frank, not as a symbol or a saint but as a human being and a literary artist.” New Yorker
“Narrator Erin Bennett approaches the text with profound respect for Anne and her memory…Bennett smoothly weaves the narrative, whose expressive range is remarkable in both depth and breadth…A memorable performance with just the right tone and feeling. Winner of the AudioFile Earphones Award.” AudioFile
“Trenchant…An essential look at the diarist’s legacy.” Publishers Weekly (starred review)
“Quite moving are the ‘interludes’ testifying to the diary’s impact on individual readers across the globe. A final chapter, ‘Anne in the Political World’…speculating on how Anne might have viewed these issues if she had survived.” Kirkus Reviews
“This trenchant study from literary critic Franklin (A Thousand Darknesses) chronicles the brief life of Anne Frank (1929–1945) and traces the complex ways in which her story continues to reverberate. The biographical first section captures the claustrophobia of Frank’s two years in the secret annex of her father’s former workplace and provides a wrenching account of the months leading up to her death from typhus in the Bergen-Belsen concentration camp. Franklin then turns her attention to Otto Frank’s publication of his daughter’s diary in 1947 and how it’s been used and misused in the decades since. Some critics accuse the diary’s adaptations of downplaying Frank’s Judaism, Franklin writes, noting that the popular 1955 play The Diary of Anne Frank altered a Frank quote about the persecution of Jewish people to instead emphasize how, in the playwrights’ words, “there’ve always been people that’ve had to .” Elsewhere, Franklin discusses how Diary of a Young Girl inspired South African anti-apartheid activists in the 1980s, and how American conservatives have sought to ban the book over passages in which Frank reflects on her sexuality. The biography succeeds in “restoring as a human being rather than an icon,” and Franklin’s probing examination of the eventful afterlife of Frank’s diary testifies to how the lessons of the Holocaust continue to be litigated. This is an essential look at the diarist’s legacy.” Publishers Weekly (starred review)

Reviews

Reviews

Author

Author Bio: Ruth Franklin

Author Bio: Ruth Franklin

Ruth Franklin is a book critic and frequent contributor to the New Yorker, Harper’s, and many other publications. A recipient of a New York Public Library Cullman Fellowship and a Guggenheim Fellowship, she lives in Brooklyn, New York.

Titles by Author

Details

Details

Available Formats : CD, Library CD, MP3 CD, Playaway
Category: Nonfiction/Biography & Autobiography
Runtime: 12.63
Audience: Adult
Language: English