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A Country to Call Home

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From the editor of A Country of Refuge comes an anthology of new writing on one of the defining issues of our time. Focusing on the fate of refugee children and young adults, it is aimed at children and adult readers alike, and features work from Michael Morpurgo, Eoin Colfer, Kit de Waal and Simon Armitage among many others.

There are tales of home, and missing it; poems about the dangerous journeys undertaken and life in the refugee camps; stories about prejudice, but also stories of children’s fortitude, their dreams and aspirations.

A Country to Call Home implores us to build bridges, not walls. It is intended as a reminder of our shared humanity, seeking to challenge the negative narratives that so often cloud our view of these vulnerable young people, and prevent us giving them the empathy they deserve.

The book will include newly commissioned stories, flash fiction, poetry and original artwork from some of our finest children’s David Almond, Chris Riddell, Moniza Alvi, Sita Brahmachari, Peter Kalu, Judith Kerr, Patrice Lawrence, Anna Perera, the late Christine Pullein-Thompson, Bali Rai and S. F. Said.

256 pages, Paperback

Published May 31, 2018

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Lucy Popescu

8 books2 followers

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Displaying 1 - 8 of 8 reviews
Profile Image for Crazytourists_books.
643 reviews66 followers
June 8, 2020
A very good collection of short stories about young refugees and asylum seekers. As always in such books, some of the stories were so strong that made others look kind of boring. A good choice overall
Profile Image for Ellie Kidger.
151 reviews1 follower
June 16, 2020
I would recommend everyone read this. It is so poignant, and shows the many different faces of the lives of refugees, past and present.
154 reviews2 followers
January 26, 2021
This is a poiniant book about being a child refugee. It speaks of our humanity, the fear to be sent back to war, the mistake of not locking a door, needs for nappies or sanitrary products., grief love belonging and compassion

The quality of contributioms is mixed and i would have liked to see more lived experience of being a refugee
Profile Image for Anne Tucker.
545 reviews5 followers
March 7, 2019
mixed - some of the stories were excellent, some less interesting. Its a very good idea.
I find short stories fairly hard to read unless they are extremely good.
Profile Image for Mary Walsh.
245 reviews7 followers
September 27, 2021
Wow, just read it!! Sad, heartwarming, terrifying. Stories that bring home the heartbreak of child refugees.
Profile Image for Laurel Lindström.
Author 1 book3 followers
November 14, 2022
A Country to Call Home
I’m not much in the habit of writing book reviews. There are so many people much better at it and far more committed to it than me. And anyway I am not really sure how to go about it. And I’m lazy too which doesn’t help. Most of the book reviews I read by online bloggers are summaries of the book in question, that they mostly like. When I read those books I mostly don’t like them, so the online-blogging-book-reviewers club is not one I want to join. At least it wasn’t. Having read A Country to Call Home I find it is such a powerful piece of work that I have to share my views.

This book is an anthology, a collection of pieces about and by young refugees, put together by editor Lucy Popescu. According to the book’s introduction children make up half the world’s refugees. Gloom alert right there, so this wasn’t a book I was desperately keen to read. I was sure it would make me completely miserable, but fortune had other plans: conscience and curiosity slapped hard my emotional cowardice.

As soon as I finished the first couple of pieces I was so glad I picked up the book, even if I had done so with some reluctance. I picked it up with a sigh, and put it down with a sigh, but one of a very different sort. Once I started A Country to Call Home I literally couldn’t put it down, not least because of how the stories, poems and interviews are organised. They showcase a diverse range of voices, ordered so you’re constantly tempted by what is coming next. What comes next is mostly unexpected, which also keeps you hooked. When I did finish this book, I immediately started leafing through to reread my favourite pieces. How did I jump from dutiful to delight in a mere handful of pages?

It was the breadth of the writing, the voices and the balance between anguish and joy, the jolting realities. It was the horror and the threats, as in “Now you tell the truth or you will end the same way” said to a child in Christine Pullein-Thompson’s I Want the Truth. It was the insensitive and lazy renaming of Jamal and Daoud in Miriam Halahmy’s The Memory Box. There are 30 such contributions in A Country to Call Home ranging from the ones mentioned above through Brian Conaghan’s poem Just Another Someone, to Sita Brahmachari’s Amir and George. This is the longest of the stories and my personal favourite. There are contributions from Michael Morpago and Eoin Colfer, Kit de Waal and Simon Armitage to name but a few. There is also an interview with Judith Kerr, an unreluctant refugee from Nazi Germany, and illustrations by Chris Riddell throughout.

These stories, interviews and poems resonate and will touch different readers in different ways. They are rather like filters through which we can see our own experiences, which is why Moniza Alvi’s poem Exile is especially resonant for me. And in Bali Rai’s the Mermaid, I totally relate to the line: “I am just like the mermaid by the harbour. Stranded far from home. Forever.”

Dealing with such complex and personal experiences in a collection that doesn’t exclude or numb the reader, for whatever reason, takes light touch and care. The weight of the awfulness of the refugees’ horrendous experiences is balanced with hope, and an appreciation that we can hear these voices. We learn to listen, to try to understand and relate to the human stories behind every statistic, every deportation, every internment, every death.

This collection addresses a difficult and emotive subject, but you should read it because it will change you, especially your emotional responses to immigration horrors. It may also help you cope with your own tangled fears and hopes, as you consider the fates of the people in the book and for the scope of what wider awareness of their experiences might achieve. A Country to Call Home adds new dimensions to simplistic sound bite renderings that cloak truly awful human experiences with insensate numbers. All credit to editor Lucy Popescu for a sensitive, inclusive and provocative collection.
Profile Image for Katy Picken.
164 reviews
August 16, 2020
As any anthology from a variety of writers, the quality of this was mixed. I was disappointed that less than half of them were actually written by young refugees themselves. Having said that, this collection gave a real insight into some of the obstacles and hardships faced by refugees, and some of the day to day struggles (like finding clothes to fit, or sanitary protection) that don't even occur to us usually. Well worth reading despite its flaws.
Displaying 1 - 8 of 8 reviews

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