Reviews for The far away brothers : two teenage immigrants making a life in America

Kirkus
Copyright © Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

A young readers' adaptation of the 2017 book of the same name about El Salvadoran twins captured by Border Patrol agents while entering the United States.An exploration of the humanitarian crisis at our southern border, this book takes readers from the violent streets of El Salvador through criminal-controlled zones in Guatemala and Mexico to an illegal crossing of the Rio Grande and the pursuit of the American dream. Ernesto and Ral Flores were teenagers who would rather have stayed home, but with their lives at risk from a gang, their father hired a smuggler to take them north. The journey was filled with danger, fear, homesickness, and the burden of knowing it would be their responsibility to pay back the loan for the coyote's fee taken out against the family's farmland. The author, a journalist with expertise in refugee issues, reminds readers how young these brothers were by exposing their immaturity, indulgences, and mistakesa wise choice, as their humanity shines through in their failures. Never intrusive with her research, she keeps an eye on the family story while weaving in bits of history, geography, and politics. As a result, the fear and displacement the boys felt in California are both touching and educational. The informative afterword offers historical context and suggestions about what might be done to remedy the humanitarian crisis. Gets inside the heads and hearts of immigrants. (author's note, afterword, notes, index) (Nonfiction. 13-18) Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

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