Noted author Alice Hoffman, well known for her adult fiction, has now gifted us with When We Flew Away, a middle-grade novel about Anne Frank, her family, and the world around her in the years before she wrote her famous diary and was hidden in the Secret Annex.
We meet Anne in Amsterdam after her family has fled Germany. She makes friends, explores the city, deepens her family relationships, and connects with a first boyfriend. She is a young girl who is interested in everyone and everything and wants to have fun.
All around her, the Nazis are gaining strength. The Jews first face stringent limitations, then harsh oppression. Hoffman adheres closely to the historical framework of Anne’s life, filling it in with the girl’s thoughts, dreams, and continuous flights of fancy. Hoffman imagines the conversations Anne shared with those in her immediate world, shining a clear light on her character and development. The book leaves readers with a poignant and heart-rending picture of a young girl who is just beginning to blossom when she’s forced into hiding, a concentration camp, and, ultimately, a tragic death.
The Anne of the diary, who encapsulated the experiences of many of Europe’s Jews through her thoughtful, evocative writing, permeates every page of this novel. Just like Anne’s diary itself, When We Flew Away will serve as an introduction to life in World War II Europe, which began with growing Nazi menace and culminated with the destruction of European Jewish life. Hoffman’s prose contains the perfect blend of historical reality and gentle fictionalization. Readers will be inspired to learn more about the Holocaust; they might even want to read the renowned diary on which this story is based.
Michal Hoschander Malen is the editor of Jewish Book Council’s young adult and children’s book reviews. A former librarian, she has lectured on topics relating to literacy, run book clubs, and loves to read aloud to her grandchildren.