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We All Wore Stars

por Theo Coster

Otros autores: Ver la sección otros autores.

MiembrosReseñasPopularidadValoración promediaConversaciones / Menciones
8823306,619 (4.2)1 / 17
"In 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, who experienced the horrors of Bergen-Belsen but also made a miraculous reconnection with Anne days before her death"--… (más)
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Esta reseña ha sido escrita por los Primeros Reseñadores de LibraryThing.
This is a review of the advanced copy “We All Wore Stars” by Theo Coster for LibraryThing Early Reviewers.

The book is about a handful of classmates who were relegated to Amsterdam’s Jewish Lyceum during World War II.

The author and Anne Frank were among the nearly 500 boys and girls at the school. Only half of them survived the war. The author cites that 80% of the Jewish population in the Netherlands were killed during the Nazi occupation, which is twice the percentage of Jews in Belgium and France.

The book explores how many children went into hiding and how others operated under a “ghastly delusion” that they would at least avoid hunger and illness in Nazi labor camps.

The book also reveals the enormous pressure on children in hiding to be quiet and not make trouble, and the absolute lack of professional help after the war in easing the emotional trauma. The moving lore around Anne Frank’s life remains inexhaustible and eternal.

An unpleasant time in history but one that needs to be recorded. This reviewer does recommend this book and rates the book with 4 out of 5 stars. ( )
  memasmb | May 22, 2023 |
I've always loved the Diary of Anne Frank so when I saw this book I knew I had to read it. I was expecting a book full of stories of Anne. What I got was a book of the stories of the classmates of Anne and what happened to them during the war. You can barely make a connection between these people and Anne Frank. It almost seems like a gimick to sell books because theres barely any stories of Anne in it. But if you get passed that it was an ok book, but I've read better memory books about the Holocaust. ( )
  MerryMeerkat | Sep 26, 2013 |
Esta reseña ha sido escrita por los Primeros Reseñadores de LibraryThing.
It is fashionable for a reviewer to establisher his bona fides by mentioning extensive experience with the topic at hand. When it comes to the Holocaust, such a maneuver seems particularly crass. A thousand memoirs read are as nothing compared to a tattoo on the arm. But the memoirists themselves do us a great service. The most valuable of these accounts allow us to bear witness to the capacity for the greatest evil, and in its wake, the greatest resilience and will to survive. And they offer up the weight of an almost unimaginable emotional landscape: one painted in fear, hunger, death and obscenity.

I wish I could report that "We All Wore Stars: Memories of Anne Frank from her Classmates" by Theo Coster is such an account. Mr. Coster has produced a book based on meetings and interviews with his – and her --- former classmates. This emerged out of his documentary film “The Classmates of Anne Frank” based on the same project.

In fact, the title of this book is misleading. The memories of Anne Frank are present but spare, and the book deals more with Mr. Coster’s interviews focusing on experiences in Holland during the War, and his own story of surviving the war in the care of a Christian family. That the Anne Frank name is prominent in the title is testament more to her continuing marketability, and one wonders whether the appearance of exploitation crossed Mr. Coster’s mind.

Perhaps Miss Frank would have no objection. But precocious and talented writer that she was, she could not have forgiven the rest. It is hard to conceive that an account of Jews surviving Nazi occupation amid the murders of their fellows could be sterile. But that is what Mr. Coster has accomplished. The emotional tone throughout is shockingly cheerful and chatty; it is as if the team survived a particularly bad game, and then went out for dinner.

It is not clear whether the author is able to appreciate the full brunt of his subject, but is not writer enough to articulate it. Or whether – could it be due to wartime trauma? – his limited emotional insight does not allow him to address this difficult topic. One wished throughout that Anne Frank were only here to leap to the author’s aid. ( )
1 vota stellarexplorer | Jun 11, 2013 |
Esta reseña ha sido escrita por los Primeros Reseñadores de LibraryThing.
As the title suggests, Anne Frank's classmates detail stories of how they remember her from when they attended school or grew up together. This work is more than just fond memories of Anne. Each classmate details their own situations and they reflect on their own lives before, during, and after the war. These stories mesmerized me more than their memories of Anne. This short novel is great for those studying Anne Frank or those who love to read about the history of WWII. ( )
  lms8esmith | May 30, 2013 |
Esta reseña ha sido escrita por los Primeros Reseñadores de LibraryThing.
What is left to say about Anne Frank that the lively, spirited and ultimately doomed teenager who died in a Nazi concentration camp?

Plenty, as Theo Coster proves in this thin but charming book. Anne's friends, now more than 80 years old, recall her as flirty, fun, interested in movies, boys and parties. In other words a typical teenaged girl. But Anne's friends recall her gift with words too, and feel as many who've read her diary do-- that the world lost a unique literary voice when the Holocaust claimed her.

Even more poignant are the recollections of Coster and his friends of classmates who disappeared one by one; some to unknown fates but many to death at the hands of an evil regime.

Some of Anne's classmates say that they never had a normal adolescence-- not just because of the war but because they never had a chance to "rebel,'' as they were in hiding.

All children play pretend but for this generation of Jewish children in Holland, "we were performing in a kind of play, only it was for real and for our lives,'' Coster writes. ( )
  Frank_Juliano | May 6, 2013 |
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Good fortune and bad luck ought not to play such important roles in one's life. They may be essential to winning a game, but as soon as lives depend on them, there is no justice. That is all too often the case in World War II and in every other war as well, of course.
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"In 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, who experienced the horrors of Bergen-Belsen but also made a miraculous reconnection with Anne days before her death"--

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