A Little Girl Named Anne New Photos of Anne Frank, celebrating Jewish holidays, and Judaism and sexuality. ELIZABETH APPLEBAUM ASSISTANT EDITOR M Anne Frank, above, in the summer of 1940, on the flat roof at the back of her house, where she often sat and read. At right, a postcard Otto Frank sent to his sister just before the family went into hiding: "It is a pity that we can no longer correspond with you, but that is how it is. You must understand." At the top of the card is a note from Anne which reads, "I cannot write a letter about the holidays now. Regards and kisses." argot often played with her friends out near the street, but Anne was never allowed to leave the gar- den. She was too young. So Anne Frank spent her afternoons during the early 1930s in a sandbox — a stur- dy, light wooden container at 24 Ganghoferstrasse in Frankfurt. In one photograph, Anne wears a flower-print dress with a white collar and sits at the edge of the sandbox. Beside her stands her moth- er in a white dress and black- and-white shoes with pointed toes, the kind of shoes that saw their heyday in the 1930s, then disappeared. Anne Frank: Beyond the Diary, just published by Viking, is a photographic remembrance compiled by Ruud van der Rol and Rian Verhoeven of the Anne Frank House. It contains hundreds of never-before- seen pictures of Anne and her family and speaks at length of her life preceding the family's move into the secret attic. Many of the pictures were taken by Anne's father, Otto, an avid photographer who loved nothing better than focusing on his family. There are pic- tures of Anne and Margot at their home in Frankfurt, with childhood friends, in school and at the beach, and at their new residence in Amsterdam, where the Franks moved after Hitler took power in Germany. Beyond the Diary also contains accounts of the last days of Anne and Margot, both of whom died in Bergen-Belsen. An old school friend, Lies Goosen, remembers talking to Anne through the barbed wire at the death camp. Her hair had been shorn; she was emaciated and her heart was filled with agony: She was sure her parents were dead. "I always think if Anne had known that her father was still alive she might have had more strength to survive," Lies said. Historian David Biale has managed to come up with quite a sexy topic for his new Eros and the Jews, published by Basic Books. Eros examines Jewish tradition and writings in relation to sexuality, con- sidering everything from Philip Roth's Portnoy's Complaint to the Talmud's view of desire. Mr. Biale also discusses Zionism as "an erotic revolution" and American Jews' ambivalent attitude toward sex. Fans of Woody Allen will want to check out Eros, as will devotees of Isaac Bashevis Singer, both of whom Mr. Biale discusses at length in his book. Mr. Biale is a professor of Jewish history and director of the Center for Jewish Studies at the Graduate Theological Union in Berkeley, Calif. He is the author of Gershom Scholem: Kabbalah and Counter- History and Power and Powerlessness in Jewish History. Also new from Basic Books is A People Divided: Judaism in Contemporary America by Jewish Theological Seminary history Professor Jack Wertheimer. A People Divided offers an analysis of American Jewish religious behavior — the Jewish community's diversi- ty and how it has been affect- ed by fundamental changes is the Jewish community of the United States sustaining itself? And how do patterns within American Judaism correlate with broader trends in U.S. life? Strange, fascinating rela- tionships are the focus of the latest work by Anne Roiphe, whose previous books include Up the Sandbox, Lovingkindness and The Pursuit of Happiness. If You Knew Me, published last month by Little, Brown and Co., is the story of the love between two older peo- ple and the influence of a young woman: Leah, a biolo- gist; 011ie., a high school English teacher; and 011ie's sister, Sally. The three end up on the beach, where a chance meet- ing changes all their in American society at large. Among the groups Professor Wertheimer dis- cusses are Humanistic, gay and interfaith congregations, as well as Lubavitch and its cable TV channel and "Moshiach Times" comic book. He considers such questions as how American, and how Jewish, is Jewish religious behavior? How well lives. Leah finds her cool veneer fading, and 011ie's relationship with Sally takes quite a different turn as he falls in love with Leah. Scholar and Rabbi Joseph Soloveitchik, as well as the author's father, Rabbi Eliyahu Chayim Greenberg, served as the inspiration for Rabbi Irving "Yitz" ANNE page 126