My Family Divided : One Girl's Journey of Home, Loss, and Hope by Erica Moroz and Diane Guerrero (2018, Hardcover)

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Authors : Guerrero, Diane, Moroz, Erica. Publisher : Henry Holt and Co. (BYR).

About this product

Product Identifiers

PublisherHolt & Company, Henry
ISBN-101250134862
ISBN-139781250134868
eBay Product ID (ePID)239541930

Product Key Features

Book TitleMy Family Divided : One Girl's Journey of Home, Loss, and Hope
Number of Pages256 Pages
LanguageEnglish
TopicSocial Topics / Emigration & Immigration, Family / General (See Also Headings under Social Topics), Biography & Autobiography / Social Activists, Biography & Autobiography / Performing Arts
Publication Year2018
IllustratorYes
GenreJuvenile Nonfiction
AuthorErica Moroz, Diane Guerrero
FormatHardcover

Dimensions

Item Height1 in
Item Weight14.1 Oz
Item Length8.6 in
Item Width5.8 in

Additional Product Features

Intended AudienceJuvenile Audience
LCCN2017-041239
ReviewsIn the Country We Love : One of Chicago Public Library and BookRiot's Best Books of 2016 "Guerrero transforms a truly terrible situation into something meaningful, using her story and her role as an Ambassador for Citizenship and Naturalization by the White House to try to help other immigrant families left in this terrible position." -- Publishers Weekly "Lovingly detailed in colloquial and well-paced prose . . . The author's candor in chronicling the lowest moments of her life reads like an urgent confessional. . . The author's greatest strength lies in her ability to advocate for undocumented immigrants and others affected by immigration status." --Kirkus Reviews "Offering readers the story she needed to hear as a child, Guerrero shines a light on this country's flawed immigration system, eloquently calling for reform without diminishing her appreciation for the opportunities US citizenship has afforded her. A timely and enlightening read." -- Booklist " In the Country We Love is the poignant, candid, and often shocking account of the challenges Guerrero faced as a citizen child of undocumented parents" -- Kirkus Reviews [special cover feature] "I could not recommend this book enough, especially if you liked The Book of Unknown Americans." --Book Riot [best books of April 2016] " In the Country We Love is a necessary story for our times...It is a heartrending memoir that humanizes the story of America's immigration policies." -- San Antonio News-Express "Advocating on behalf of the undocumented immigrants in our country, Guerrero's memoir is a well-written tell-all of a woman who traveled a difficult path to stardom." --ReadItForward.com, In the Country We Love : One of Chicago Public Library 's and BookRiot's Best Books of 2016 "Guerrero transforms a truly terrible situation into something meaningful, using her story and her role as an Ambassador for Citizenship and Naturalization by the White House to try to help other immigrant families left in this terrible position." - Publishers Weekly "Lovingly detailed in colloquial and well-paced prose . . . The author's candor in chronicling the lowest moments of her life reads like an urgent confessional. . . The author's greatest strength lies in her ability to advocate for undocumented immigrants and others affected by immigration status." -Kirkus Reviews "Offering readers the story she needed to hear as a child, Guerrero shines a light on this country's flawed immigration system, eloquently calling for reform without diminishing her appreciation for the opportunities US citizenship has afforded her. A timely and enlightening read." - Booklist " In the Country We Love is the poignant, candid, and often shocking account of the challenges Guerrero faced as a citizen child of undocumented parents" - Kirkus Reviews [special cover feature] "I could not recommend this book enough, especially if you liked The Book of Unknown Americans." -Book Riot [best books of April 2016] " In the Country We Love is a necessary story for our times... It is a heartrending memoir that humanizes the story of America's immigration policies." - San Antonio News-Express "Advocating on behalf of the undocumented immigrants in our country, Guerrero's memoir is a well-written tell-all of a woman who traveled a difficult path to stardom." -ReadItForward.com, "A moving coming-of-age memoir." -- School Library Journal , starred review "Eminently accessible . . . . This is a timely reminder that none of us lives in a vacuum and that deportation affects more than just the deportee." -- Kirkus Reviews "Truly a book of our generation." -- Booklist In the Country We Love : One of Chicago Public Library and BookRiot's Best Books of 2016 "Guerrero transforms a truly terrible situation into something meaningful, using her story and her role as an Ambassador for Citizenship and Naturalization by the White House to try to help other immigrant families left in this terrible position." -- Publishers Weekly "Lovingly detailed in colloquial and well-paced prose . . . The author's candor in chronicling the lowest moments of her life reads like an urgent confessional. . . The author's greatest strength lies in her ability to advocate for undocumented immigrants and others affected by immigration status." --Kirkus Reviews "Offering readers the story she needed to hear as a child, Guerrero shines a light on this country's flawed immigration system, eloquently calling for reform without diminishing her appreciation for the opportunities US citizenship has afforded her. A timely and enlightening read." -- Booklist " In the Country We Love is the poignant, candid, and often shocking account of the challenges Guerrero faced as a citizen child of undocumented parents" -- Kirkus Reviews [special cover feature] "I could not recommend this book enough, especially if you liked The Book of Unknown Americans." --Book Riot [best books of April 2016] " In the Country We Love is a necessary story for our times...It is a heartrending memoir that humanizes the story of America's immigration policies." -- San Antonio News-Express "Advocating on behalf of the undocumented immigrants in our country, Guerrero's memoir is a well-written tell-all of a woman who traveled a difficult path to stardom." --ReadItForward.com, "Eminently accessible . . . . This is a timely reminder that none of us lives in a vacuum and that deportation affects more than just the deportee." -- Kirkus Reviews In the Country We Love : One of Chicago Public Library and BookRiot's Best Books of 2016 "Guerrero transforms a truly terrible situation into something meaningful, using her story and her role as an Ambassador for Citizenship and Naturalization by the White House to try to help other immigrant families left in this terrible position." -- Publishers Weekly "Lovingly detailed in colloquial and well-paced prose . . . The author's candor in chronicling the lowest moments of her life reads like an urgent confessional. . . The author's greatest strength lies in her ability to advocate for undocumented immigrants and others affected by immigration status." --Kirkus Reviews "Offering readers the story she needed to hear as a child, Guerrero shines a light on this country's flawed immigration system, eloquently calling for reform without diminishing her appreciation for the opportunities US citizenship has afforded her. A timely and enlightening read." -- Booklist " In the Country We Love is the poignant, candid, and often shocking account of the challenges Guerrero faced as a citizen child of undocumented parents" -- Kirkus Reviews [special cover feature] "I could not recommend this book enough, especially if you liked The Book of Unknown Americans." --Book Riot [best books of April 2016] " In the Country We Love is a necessary story for our times...It is a heartrending memoir that humanizes the story of America's immigration policies." -- San Antonio News-Express "Advocating on behalf of the undocumented immigrants in our country, Guerrero's memoir is a well-written tell-all of a woman who traveled a difficult path to stardom." --ReadItForward.com
SynopsisBefore landing a spot on the megahit Netflix show Orange is the New Black ; before wow-ing audiences as Lina on Jane the Virgin ; and before her incredible activism and work on immigration reform, Diane Guerrero was a young girl living in Boston. One day, while Guerrero was at school, her undocumented immigrant parents were taken from their home, detained, and deported. Guerrero's life, which had been full of the support of a loving family, was turned upside down. Reflective of the experiences of millions of undocumented immigrant families in the United States, Guerrero's story in My Family Divided , written with Erica Moroz, is at once heartbreaking and hopeful.
LC Classification NumberPN2287.G7455A3 2018

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