Library Journal - Audio
04/01/2022
Sullivan (Stalin's Daughter) offers a fascinating overview of a six-year cold case investigation by FBI agent Vincent Pankoke and his amazing team of psychologists, criminologists, archivists, and forensic scientists, who aimed to definitively identify the person or people who in 1944 betrayed Anne Frank, her family, and four Dutch Jews to the Gestapo. Anne Frank's The Diary of a Young Girl has been read by more 30 million people, but it ends just before the eight people hiding in an attic in Amsterdam during World War II are discovered and sent to a concentration camp. Sullivan's excellent attempt to understand how eight people can go undetected for more than two years allows her to offer a vivid picture of Amsterdam, wartime, and the best and worst of the human heart. Julie Whelan's narration of the audiobook creates the tension necessary for listeners to get lost in the Franks' story—living in a time and place where it was difficult to know who to trust and where all actions had to be questioned. VERDICT A memorable cold case investigation that answers numerous nagging questions about how the Nazis discovered where Anne Frank and seven others were hiding during World War II.—Pam Kingsbury
From the Publisher
"Sullivan’s narrative, full of twists and turns and dead-end leads, commands attention at every page, dramatic without being sensational." — Kirkus Reviews (starred review)
“Hums with living history, human warmth and indignation….Sullivan circles all of these possibilities like Agatha Christie with Zoom and a time machine.” — New York Times
"The Betrayal of Anne Frank is a stunning piece of historical detective work, cleverly structured and grippingly written." — Telegraph (UK)
New York Times
Hums with living history, human warmth and indignation….Sullivan circles all of these possibilities like Agatha Christie with Zoom and a time machine.
Telegraph (UK)
"The Betrayal of Anne Frank is a stunning piece of historical detective work, cleverly structured and grippingly written."
Winnipeg Free Press
There are words of such sorrow in The Betrayal of Anne Frank that they may lodge forever in the cupboards of your mind.
Library Journal
08/01/2021
Anne Frank's The Diary of a Young Girl is among the most-read books in the world, but despite reams of studies no one has been able to determine who betrayed its author and her family. Finally, as recounted here by award-winning Canadian author Sullivan, retired FBI agent Vincent Pankoke stepped in with a team of investigators, examining over tens of thousands of pages of documents and interviewing descendants of people familiar with the Franks to come to the conclusions relayed here.
Kirkus Reviews
★ 2022-01-26
An extraordinary tale of modern science and old-fashioned gumshoe work applied to a world-renowned crime 80 years after the fact.
On Aug. 4, 1944, a German “Jew-hunting unit” searched an Amsterdam warehouse and discovered the family of young Anne Frank in a hidden apartment. The Franks had been sheltering there for more than two years, shielded by paterfamilias Otto’s workers. He alone survived the death camps. Hauntingly, as Sullivan writes, the last sighting of Anne was at Auschwitz, where, “delirious with typhus,” she was “naked except for a blanket covering her shoulders.” The officer who led that German squad wound up as an inspector in the Austrian police, while Otto spent his life overseeing Anne’s memory through the publication of her diary. But who exposed the Franks’ hiding place to the Nazis? That was the question some 50 data scientists, historians, forensic scientists, and other researchers, mostly Dutch, had before them, and it’s the overarching question of this book. With the aid of retired FBI special agent Vince Pankoke, the team used artificial intelligence, behavioral psychology, and other modern methods to find out, examining numerous possible suspects. Only one met the familiar categories of knowledge, motive, and opportunity. The investigative team determined that he was a Jewish notary who used the Franks’ sanctum as a bargaining chip to save his own family. On returning to Amsterdam, Otto received an anonymous note revealing his betrayer’s identity. He did not broadcast it because, the investigators conclude, Frank may have recognized the man’s desperate situation as he made that fateful decision to collaborate. Sullivan’s narrative, full of twists and turns and dead-end leads, commands attention at every page, dramatic without being sensational. She writes, memorably, of Otto’s work after the death of their Judas: “He wanted [everyone] to know that fascism builds slowly and then one day it is an iron wall that looms and cannot be circumvented.”
Every reader of Anne Frank’s Diary will want to have this superbly rendered tale of scholarly detection at hand.