Introduction

1.6K 15 1
                                    

Wandering around the Union Public Library, a set of books caught my eye. No, it's not an actor's handbook (although that would be very useful), but something more recent in world history; World War II. I stay for a bit, looking at the information in the text. There was so much information, I almost froze. Yet I got something out of it. Specifically, Adolf Hitler's rise to power, the Nuremberg Laws, which had stripped the rights of Jews, and D-Day, the beach invasion of Normandy, France. 

I recall what I read in English class, which was a play based around Anne Frank's diary. And the essay that I, unfortunately, had to do. Looking down on my books, I realize what I can do. Use the books to help write the essay. Knowing information about the Holocaust, I can tie the play, The Diary of Anne Frank, into the essay. But what should I do? Maybe I can explain how Hitler's rise to power, the Nuremberg Laws, and D-Day correlate with the play.

"The Diary of Anne Frank" and World War II (COMPLETED)Where stories live. Discover now