The Diary of A Young Girl: Anne Frank.
The Diary of Anne Frank is a non-fiction narrative, based on the well-organized accurate diary of a thirteen-year-old girl by the name of Anne Frank. Anne Frank was born on June twelfth nineteen-twenty nine. Anne was born into a middle class family of three, which included: her father Otto Frank, Mrs. Frank, and her older sister Margot Frank. Anne was exceedingly attached to her loving and kind father, more so than any one else in her family. Anne felt that Mr. Frank was the only person who understood her. Anne received her famous diary as a gift from her father on her thirteenth birthday. Between June nineteen-forty-two and August nineteen-forty-four, Anne recorded her most intimate feelings, emotions, and thoughts, as well as the events that were taking place around her. The diary of Anne Frank dates back to the early nineteenth century, when the Nazi forces occupied Germany during World War II, also recognized as the holocaust. The Diary of Anne Frank leads it's audience through the severe times of a family trying to escape imprisonment in concentration camps by Nazi soldiers, where the death rate for Jews was exceedingly high.
During the holocaust, Holland had developed into a hierarchical society, where the Germans were the dominant group and the Jews were at the bottom of the hierarchy. Due to the persecution of the Jews, Anne and her family were forced into hiding, where they were confined to a small attic above her father's office building, along with an additional family of three, which included: Hermann van Pels, Auguste van Pels and Peter van Pels; along with a gentleman named Albert Dussel, they were all taken into hiding with the Frank family. The circumstances of their living conditions were a definite culture shock to Anne, her family, and many other non-German's. Anne's descriptions of their living conditions often revealed that their food supply was either small or rotten.