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OverviewIn 1941, Theo Coster was a student at the Amsterdam Jewish Lyceum, one in a class of 28 Jewish children that the Nazis had segregated from the rest of the Dutch population. Among Theo's fellow students was a young Anne Frank, whose diary would later become one of the most important documents of the Holocaust. In this remarkable group portrait, Coster and five of his fellow classmates gather their personal stories and memories of Anne. The accounts collected here do not just help us to rediscover Anne Frank. They also stand on their own as remarkable stories of ingenuity and survival during the Holocaust - from Albert Gomes de Mesquita, who hid in ten different towns across Europe - to Hannah Goslar, whoexperienced the horrors of Bergen-Belsen but also made a miraculous reconnection with Anne days before her death. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Theo Coster , Marjolijn De JagerPublisher: Palgrave Macmillan Imprint: Palgrave Macmillan Dimensions: Width: 14.70cm , Height: 2.00cm , Length: 21.60cm Weight: 0.316kg ISBN: 9780230114449ISBN 10: 023011444 Pages: 224 Publication Date: 27 October 2011 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In Print ![]() This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us. Table of ContentsThe Birth of an Idea * Part I: Off to a new school - age twelve * Part II: Going underground - age fourteen * Prisoners for exchange * Nanette's clock * Arrested * Reunion at Merwedeplein * Going underground * Anne Frank's admirers * Inside and outside school * The German invasion * Escaped from German hands * The first electric potter in the Netherlands * Hiding in the forest * A copied letter * Visiting the Anne Frank House * Westerbork * Expunging memories * Part III: After the war - age seventeen * An unexpected reunion * A future in Israel * The queen's permission * In a glass coffin * In love in London * A grim message * Levels of suffering * The importance of blond hair * Epilogue * The filmReviewsAnne Frank has become a universal symbol of the brutalised and extinguished innocence of childhood in the Holocaust. Yet the sheer scale of her legend tends to obscure the quite ordinary quality of her life as she lived it before going into hiding. By highlighting the experiences of those who shared her school days and survived the war, Theo Coster helps us to see Anne alive in her community, one child among the millions touched so dramatically by evil. Their tales of survival offer a poignant and inspiring contrast to Anne's horrifying death. --Ben Barkow, Director, The Wiener Library, London ""We All Wore Stars is an intimate and poignant portrait of the day-to-day lives of Jewish children during wartime. The innocence and warmth of many of their childhood memories contrasts starkly with the horrors of the Holocaust. This powerful book asserts that life in wartime requires constant reflection, something which is all too apparent after reading it."" - Gavin Porter, The Big Issue ""Anne Frank has become a universal symbol of the brutalised and extinguished innocence of childhood in the Holocaust. Yet the sheer scale of her legend tends to obscure the quite ordinary quality of her life as she lived it before going into hiding. By highlighting the experiences of those who shared her school days and survived the war, Theo Coster helps us to see Anne alive in her community, one child among the millions touched so dramatically by evil. Their tales of survival offer a poignant and inspiring contrast to Anne's horrifying death."" - Ben Barkow, Director, The Wiener Library, London """We All Wore Stars is an intimate and poignant portrait of the day-to-day lives of Jewish children during wartime. The innocence and warmth of many of their childhood memories contrasts starkly with the horrors of the Holocaust. This powerful book asserts that life in wartime requires constant reflection, something which is all too apparent after reading it."" - Gavin Porter, The Big Issue ""Anne Frank has become a universal symbol of the brutalised and extinguished innocence of childhood in the Holocaust. Yet the sheer scale of her legend tends to obscure the quite ordinary quality of her life as she lived it before going into hiding. By highlighting the experiences of those who shared her school days and survived the war, Theo Coster helps us to see Anne alive in her community, one child among the millions touched so dramatically by evil. Their tales of survival offer a poignant and inspiring contrast to Anne's horrifying death."" - Ben Barkow, Director, The Wiener Library, London" We All Wore Stars is an intimate and poignant portrait of the day-to-day lives of Jewish children during wartime. The innocence and warmth of many of their childhood memories contrasts starkly with the horrors of the Holocaust. This powerful book asserts that life in wartime requires constant reflection, something which is all too apparent after reading it. - Gavin Porter, The Big Issue Anne Frank has become a universal symbol of the brutalised and extinguished innocence of childhood in the Holocaust. Yet the sheer scale of her legend tends to obscure the quite ordinary quality of her life as she lived it before going into hiding. By highlighting the experiences of those who shared her school days and survived the war, Theo Coster helps us to see Anne alive in her community, one child among the millions touched so dramatically by evil. Their tales of survival offer a poignant and inspiring contrast to Anne's horrifying death. - Ben Barkow, Director, The Wiener Library, London Author InformationTheo Coster was a classmate and friend of Anne Frank at the Amsterdam Jewish Lyceum. A toymaker and game designer, he is executive producer of the documentary film The Classmates of Anne Frank. Coster has lived in Tel Aviv since 1955. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |