Limit search to available items
BOOKS
Author Rubin, Susan Goldman.

Title Searching for Anne Frank : letters from Amsterdam to Iowa / by Susan Goldman Rubin in association with the Simon Wiesenthal Center-Museum of Tolerance Library and Archives.

Imprint New York, N.Y. : Harry N. Abrams Publishers, 2003.
LOCATION CALL # STATUS
 3rd FL Education Library Muth Books  DS135.N6 F73556 2003    Available
Collation 144 pages : illustrations (some color), maps (some color) ; 23 cm
age Children lcdgt
text txt rdacontent
unmediated n rdamedia
volume nc rdacarrier
Bibliog. Includes bibliographical references (pages 135-141) and index.
Contents Iowa, 1939-1940 -- Amsterdam, 1940 -- Iowa, 1940 -- Amsterdam, 1940-1941 -- Iowa, 1941 -- Amsterdam, September 1941-July 1942 -- Iowa, 1942-1943 -- Amsterdam, 1942 -- Amsterdam, 1942-1944 -- Iowa, 1943-1944 -- Holland and Poland, 1944-1945 -- Germany, 1944-1945 -- Iowa and Illinois, 1945 -- Amsterdam, 1945 -- Amsterdam, 1945-1956 -- California and Iowa, 1956-1957 -- Amsterdam, 1956-1986 -- California, 1959-Present -- Epilogue -- Postscript -- Acknowledgments -- References and resources -- Illustration credits.
Summary Provides a glimpse of life during World War II in both the Netherlands and the United States through the correspondence of Anne Frank and her Iowa pen pals. In the fall of 1939, ten-year-old Juanita Wagner of Danville, Iowa, picked a name from a list of pen pals provided by her teacher. She chose a girl her own age who lived in Amsterdam. The girl's name was Anne Frank. Through firsthand reports and interviews with Juanita's sister, Betty, friends of both Juanita and Anne Frank, as well as never-before-published photographs, Susan Goldman Rubin weaves the story of two girls -- one in America and one in the Netherlands -- against the backdrop of pending World War II, its brutal reality, and its aftermath. In alternating chapters, Goldman Rubin describes the lives of Juanita and Anne before the war begins, then continues to tell their stories, as well as those of their sisters, Betty and Margot, as the war progresses. Juanita, Betty, and their mother witness the war from afar, aware of its presence only through radio, film clips, rationing, and watching schoolmates and friends leave for armed service. In tragic contrast, Anne, Margot, and their parents go into hiding, are discovered, and are sent to concentration camps. Only Anne's father survives. Although the girls only had the opportunity to correspond briefly, their letters and contrasting experiences offer a poignant and timely look at lives during wartime. The existing correspondence between Anne and Margot Frank and their pen pals in Iowa is on permanent display at the Museum of Tolerance in Los Angeles, California.
Note Gift of Francine Parker and Amanda, Ian and Troy Parker.
MLCL.
Subject Frank, Anne, 1929-1945.
Frank, Anne, 1929-1945 -- Correspondence -- Juvenile literature.
Wagner, Juanita.
Heibner, Betty.
Frank, Anne, 1929-1945.
Wagner, Juanita.
Heibner, Betty.
Jews -- Netherlands -- Amsterdam -- Biography -- Juvenile literature.
Jewish children in the Holocaust -- Netherlands -- Amsterdam -- Biography -- Juvenile literature.
Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945) -- Netherlands -- Amsterdam -- Juvenile literature.
School children -- Iowa -- Biography -- Juvenile literature.
School children -- Iowa -- Correspondence -- Juvenile literature.
Jews -- Netherlands.
Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945) -- Netherlands -- Amsterdam.
Women -- Biography.
World War, 1939-1945 -- United States.
Netherlands -- History -- German occupation, 1940-1945.
Alt Author Museum of Tolerance (Simon Wiesenthal Center)
ISBN 0810945142
9780810945142