Jeroen De Bruyn was born in 1993 in Antwerp. At age fifteen-the same age as Anne when she died of typhus in the Bergen-Belsen concentration camp-Jeroen began doing original research on the Secret Annex. He got to know the Anne Frank House firsthand during an internship there in 2011. He went on to study journalism, subsequently contributing to prominent Flemish news magazines like Knack and Joods Actueel, and working as a senior editor for the major Belgian newspaper Gazet van Antwerpen.
‘This gripping account adds a missing human dimension to the story of the young girl hidden in an attic during the Nazi occupation of Holland—and those who helped and those who betrayed her. I read it in one gulp—as will you’ -- Kati Marton, author of 'The Chancellor' ‘As much a work of painful family therapy as painstaking historical analysis . . . A riveting read’ -- Peter Hayes, author of 'Why? Explaining the Holocaust' 'A superbly well-written, intimate, engrossing, and heartrending reckoning with the endless damage done by genocide' * Booklist (Starred) * ‘An important contribution to the literature on Anne Frank’ * Kirkus * ‘For long, the story of Bep Voskuijl, one of Anne Frank’s courageous helpers, has been mostly kept in the dark. This captivating book tells her moving and tragic story, her wartime assistance in the Secret Annex, and the long shadows of the war on her life and her family’s’ -- Dr Bart Wallet, professor of early modern and modern Jewish history at the University of Amsterdam ‘Part biography and part whodunit, The Last Secret of the Secret Annex is, above all, a bereaved son’s cri de coeur, simultaneously mourning and celebrating the mother he lost even before she died’ * Wall Street Journal * ‘This powerful story brings to life Bep’s heroism and illuminates generations of a Dutch family, its secrets, and the trauma the Nazi occupation bequeathed to the future’ -- Pamela S. Nadell, author of 'America’s Jewish Women' ‘This gripping account adds a missing human dimension to the story of the young girl hidden in an attic during the Nazi occupation of Holland—and those who helped and those who betrayed her. I read it in one gulp—as will you’ -- Kati Marton, author of 'The Chancellor' ‘As much a work of painful family therapy as painstaking historical analysis . . . A riveting read’ -- Peter Hayes, author of 'Why? Explaining the Holocaust' 'A superbly well-written, intimate, engrossing, and heartrending reckoning with the endless damage done by genocide' * Booklist (Starred) * ‘An important contribution to the literature on Anne Frank’ * Kirkus * ‘For long, the story of Bep Voskuijl, one of Anne Frank’s courageous helpers, has been mostly kept in the dark. This captivating book tells her moving and tragic story, her wartime assistance in the Secret Annex, and the long shadows of the war on her life and her family’s’ -- Dr Bart Wallet, professor of early modern and modern Jewish history at the University of Amsterdam ‘Part biography and part whodunit, The Last Secret of the Secret Annex is, above all, a bereaved son’s cri de coeur, simultaneously mourning and celebrating the mother he lost even before she died’ * Wall Street Journal * ‘This powerful story brings to life Bep’s heroism and illuminates generations of a Dutch family, its secrets, and the trauma the Nazi occupation bequeathed to the future’ -- Pamela S. Nadell, author of 'America’s Jewish Women' ‘This gripping account adds a missing human dimension to the story of the young girl hidden in an attic during the Nazi occupation of Holland—and those who helped and those who betrayed her. I read it in one gulp—as will you’ -- Kati Marton, author of 'The Chancellor' ‘As much a work of painful family therapy as painstaking historical analysis . . . A riveting read’ -- Peter Hayes, author of 'Why? Explaining the Holocaust' 'A superbly well-written, intimate, engrossing, and heartrending reckoning with the endless damage done by genocide' * Booklist (Starred) * ‘An important contribution to the literature on Anne Frank’ * Kirkus * ‘For long, the story of Bep Voskuijl, one of Anne Frank’s courageous helpers, has been mostly kept in the dark. This captivating book tells her moving and tragic story, her wartime assistance in the Secret Annex, and the long shadows of the war on her life and her family’s’ -- Dr Bart Wallet, professor of early modern and modern Jewish history at the University of Amsterdam ‘Part biography and part whodunit, The Last Secret of the Secret Annex is, above all, a bereaved son’s cri de coeur, simultaneously mourning and celebrating the mother he lost even before she died’ * Wall Street Journal * ‘This powerful story brings to life Bep’s heroism and illuminates generations of a Dutch family, its secrets, and the trauma the Nazi occupation bequeathed to the future’ -- Pamela S. Nadell, author of 'America’s Jewish Women' ‘This gripping account adds a missing human dimension to the story of the young girl hidden in an attic during the Nazi occupation of Holland—and those who helped and those who betrayed her. I read it in one gulp—as will you’ -- Kati Marton, author of 'The Chancellor' ‘As much a work of painful family therapy as painstaking historical analysis . . . A riveting read’ -- Peter Hayes, author of 'Why? Explaining the Holocaust' 'A superbly well-written, intimate, engrossing, and heartrending reckoning with the endless damage done by genocide' * Booklist (Starred) * ‘An important contribution to the literature on Anne Frank’ * Kirkus * ‘For long, the story of Bep Voskuijl, one of Anne Frank’s courageous helpers, has been mostly kept in the dark. This captivating book tells her moving and tragic story, her wartime assistance in the Secret Annex, and the long shadows of the war on her life and her family’s’ -- Dr Bart Wallet, professor of early modern and modern Jewish history at the University of Amsterdam ‘Part biography and part whodunit, The Last Secret of the Secret Annex is, above all, a bereaved son’s cri de coeur, simultaneously mourning and celebrating the mother he lost even before she died’ * Wall Street Journal * ‘This powerful story brings to life Bep’s heroism and illuminates generations of a Dutch family, its secrets, and the trauma the Nazi occupation bequeathed to the future’ -- Pamela S. Nadell, author of 'America’s Jewish Women'