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Emigration and immigration. Juvenile fiction.
Families. Juvenile fiction.
Emigration and immigration. Fiction.
Family life. Fiction.
Starred Review The subtitle of this anthology provides an apt description of what to expect, but Come On In is about much more. Composed of stories about immigration and finding home, this collection showcases fresh perspectives of young writers from an array of backgrounds: Iranian, Guatemalan, Kashmiri, Korean, and more. Suitable for middle- and high-school readers, the writing styles range from understated to in-your-face, with the uniting element being the texts' ability to wrap around the reader's emotions and hold on. There is humor, tenderness, despair, outrage, and tenacity. Some stories capture the complicated generational discrepancy between immigrant parents and their second-generation children, while others focus on such issues as ICE raids, intergenerational love, extended-family camping trips, profiling at airport-security checkpoints, border crossings, and saying farewell l under the shadow of the man in the White House. In the face of his prohibitions, Alsaid's collection seems to say, "Welcome, readers. We have something to share with you: our stories, which are not so different from yours." As a whole, this is a poignant and powerful collection of universal themes embedded with cultural specificity. The book is organized such that the stories are united by the theme of immigration, but each one stands apart in voice, experience, and style.
Starred Review for Kirkus ReviewsFifteen noted YA authors offer powerful slice-of-life reflections about immigration and its emotional complexities.Alsaid edits an extraordinary anthology featuring exquisite writing and offering a genuinely diverse collection on the richly layered topic of immigration. International in scope, the cross-section of voices is refreshingly diverse while also unified by emotional vulnerability. Nafiza Azad sets the tone in the opening story, "All the Colors of Goodbye," through the grieving voice of a 17-year-old Indian Fijian girl who has been told she must emigrate unexpectedly following a coup, though her older brother must stay because officials in their new country deem him too old to be a dependent. In Misa Sugiura's story, "Where I'm From," Eriko reveals in painful snapshots the omnipresent otherness she feels as the child of Japanese immigrants to America, both as a child and later a college freshman in the U.S.-and also when visiting Japan with her mother. The stories reveal how immigration policies not only affect families, but also friendships, as in Lilliam Rivera's "Salvation and the Sea," in which a Guatemalan/Puerto Rican best friend duo on a road trip in California undergo a polarizing experience at a random immigration checkpoint. In the closing story about Jewish émigrés to Argentina, Alsaid pays homage to the ancestors who paved the way for our very existence. The overall result is moving and deeply relevant to our contemporary world.A must-have antidote to xenophobia and a much-needed, compassionate mirror for many. (Anthology. 13-18)
Kirkus Reviews (Fri Oct 04 00:00:00 CDT 2024)Fifteen noted YA authors offer powerful slice-of-life reflections about immigration and its emotional complexities.Alsaid edits an extraordinary anthology featuring exquisite writing and offering a genuinely diverse collection on the richly layered topic of immigration. International in scope, the cross-section of voices is refreshingly diverse while also unified by emotional vulnerability. Nafiza Azad sets the tone in the opening story, "All the Colors of Goodbye," through the grieving voice of a 17-year-old Indian Fijian girl who has been told she must emigrate unexpectedly following a coup, though her older brother must stay because officials in their new country deem him too old to be a dependent. In Misa Sugiura's story, "Where I'm From," Eriko reveals in painful snapshots the omnipresent otherness she feels as the child of Japanese immigrants to America, both as a child and later a college freshman in the U.S.-and also when visiting Japan with her mother. The stories reveal how immigration policies not only affect families, but also friendships, as in Lilliam Rivera's "Salvation and the Sea," in which a Guatemalan/Puerto Rican best friend duo on a road trip in California undergo a polarizing experience at a random immigration checkpoint. In the closing story about Jewish émigrés to Argentina, Alsaid pays homage to the ancestors who paved the way for our very existence. The overall result is moving and deeply relevant to our contemporary world.A must-have antidote to xenophobia and a much-needed, compassionate mirror for many. (Anthology. 13-18)
Publishers Weekly (Fri Oct 06 00:00:00 CDT 2023)Edited by Alsaid (
Starred Review ALA Booklist (Tue Sep 01 00:00:00 CDT 2020)
Starred Review for Kirkus Reviews
Starred Review for Publishers Weekly
Kirkus Reviews (Fri Oct 04 00:00:00 CDT 2024)
Publishers Weekly (Fri Oct 06 00:00:00 CDT 2023)
This exceptional and powerful anthology explores the joys, heartbreaks and triumphs of immigration, with stories by critically acclaimed and bestselling YA authors who are shaped by the journeys they and their families have taken from home—and to find home.
WELCOME
From some of the most exciting bestselling and up-and-coming YA authors writing today…journey from Ecuador to New York City and Argentina to Utah…from Australia to Harlem and India to New Jersey…from Fiji, America, Mexico and more… Come On In.
With characters who face random traffic stops, TSA detention, customs anxiety, and the daunting and inspiring journey to new lands…who camp with their extended families, dance at weddings, keep diaries, teach ESL…who give up their rooms for displaced family, decide their own answer to the question “where are you from?” and so much more… Come On In illuminates fifteen of the myriad facets of the immigrant experience, from authors who have been shaped by the journeys they and their families have taken from home—and to find home.