10 Facts About Anne Frank's The Diary of a Young Girl

Anne Frank was born on June 12, 1929 in Frankfort, Germany. Thirteen years later, she received a book of blank pages from her mother for her 13th birthday. She used it as a diary, which she kept during the years she and her family were hiding from the Nazis in a office building in the Netherlands. After the war, Frank's diary was published and became a worldwide best seller, one of the most-read documents of World War II. There are some things about the book that you might not know, even all these years later. For example, it could have easily been destroyed and never seen at all. Miep Gies, who aided the family, recovered it after their arrest, but before the end of the war.    

7. Had Miep Gies looked at the contents of the diary, we never would have gotten to read Anne’s innermost thoughts.

Gies later said that if she had known what was inside, she would have destroyed the writings because they incriminated everyone who helped hide the Franks, the van Pels, and Fritz Pfeffer. Otto Frank finally persuaded her to read it when the book was in its second printing.

Commemorate the 88th anniversary of Anne Frank's birth by reading the rest of the things you should know about Anne Frank's The Diary of a Young Girl at Mental Floss. The article includes a video of Frank's father.


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