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  • Diary of Anne Frank, a la Shmoop. We diaries have it pretty rough. We get stolen

  • by little brothers, slathered with stickers and hidden under the bed with all the reeking

  • shoes and mutant dust bunnies. ...

  • But Anne truly appreciated me from the minute I came into her life. I was her secret keeper,

  • and her best friend.

  • Anne wrote letters to me and named me Kitty, and treated me like an actual person, which

  • was kind of cool. Except for the pigtails. Anne was a real smart cookie, even if she

  • was a bit of a chatterbox. All the middle school guys wanted to be Anne's man, but it

  • was dashing Harry Goldberg who finally swept her off her feet. He was an older man, too...16!

  • Dating was tricky, as it always is when you belong to a persecuted ethnic group that isn't

  • allowed to use public transportation and must be indoors by 8pm.

  • Holland in 1942 wasn't the greatest place to be Jewish, but not everyone was jumping

  • on the Hitler bandwagon.

  • When the Germans summoned Anne's sister, Margot, her father's coworkers helped the family

  • escape to a hiding place: the Secret Annex.

  • The Annex was made up of a few rooms hidden inside Mr. Frank's old workplace. There was

  • a slick moving bookcase and everything!

  • The Franks and their girls gained some roommates when the Van Daan showed up with

  • their son, Peter.

  • Each family had a few rooms and access to bathrooms and a sink, but none of them could

  • leave the building or raise their voices, for fear of discovery.

  • Of course, with 7 people living in a cramped space, there were more than a few fights.

  • Next to the angelic Margot and the quiet Peter, lively, sassy Anne seemed like a real problem

  • child. So, my unlucky owner became everybody's punching bag, which was totally unfair.

  • Homegirl had an attitude, to be sure, but she was hardly a juvenile delinquent. It's

  • hard to be good all the time when your daily activities consist of doing homework, listening

  • to the radio, and peeling potatoes. Oh, and personal space? Forget about it.

  • When a dentist named Albert Dussel joined them in the Annex, the family put him

  • in Anne's room, giving Anne her own personal live-in critic.

  • Yep, it was lonely being Anne, until she started seeing Peter Van Daan. Well, okay, she saw

  • him every day, but all of a sudden, he seemed different.

  • They became fast friends, and then something more, and then went back to friends again.

  • Which was probably a good thing, because a messy breakup would have gotten them captured

  • for sure.

  • The Annex crew was completely dependent on their helpers, Mr. Koophuis ,

  • Mr. Kraler , and Elli , who risked their lives to keep the families safe

  • and secretly bring them food.

  • Burglars broke into the building again and again, and it was hard to get a decent night's

  • sleep with all the planes shooting at each other and dropping bombs.

  • There was a bright side, though The radio brought news that the tide might be turning

  • against the Germans, and Anne dared to dream that she might be sitting in a regular classroom

  • sometime soon!

  • Anne didn't write anything in me after Tuesday, August 1, 1944. The Franks and Van Daans were

  • sent to concentration camps, and my best friend died in Belsen, Germany.

  • I still keep her secrets, and now I share them with the world.

Diary of Anne Frank, a la Shmoop. We diaries have it pretty rough. We get stolen

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