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Beyond the Sand and Sea

One Family's Quest for a Country to Call Home

Audiobook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

From Ty McCormick, winner of the Robert F. Kennedy Journalism Award, an epic and timeless story of a family in search of safety, security, and a place to call home.
When Asad Hussein was growing up in the world's largest refugee camp, nearly every aspect of life revolved around getting to America—a distant land where anything was possible. Thousands of displaced families like his were whisked away to the United States in the mid-2000s, leaving the dusty encampment in northeastern Kenya for new lives in suburban America. When Asad was nine, his older sister Maryan was resettled in Arizona, but Asad, his parents, and his other siblings were left behind. In the years they waited to join her, Asad found refuge in dog-eared novels donated by American charities, many of them written by immigrants who had come to the United States from poor and war-torn countries. Maryan nourished his dreams of someday writing such novels, but it would be another fourteen years before he set foot in America.
The story of Asad, Maryan, and their family's escape from Dadaab refugee camp is one of perseverance in the face of overwhelming adversity. It is also a story of happenstance, of long odds and impossibly good luck, and of uncommon generosity. In a world where too many young men are forced to make dangerous sea crossings in search of work, are recruited into extremist groups, and die at the hands of brutal security forces, Asad not only made it to the United States to join Maryan, but won a scholarship to study literature at Princeton—the first person born in Dadaab ever admitted to the prestigious university.
Beyond the Sand and Sea is an extraordinary and inspiring book for anyone searching for pinpricks of light in the darkness. Meticulously reported over three years, it reveals the strength of a family of Somali refugees who never lost faith in America—and exposes the broken refugee resettlement system that kept that family trapped for more than two decades and has turned millions into permanent exiles.
A Macmillan Audio production from St. Martin's Press

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    • Publisher's Weekly

      December 7, 2020
      Foreign Affairs editor McCormick debuts with a moving and meticulously researched portrait of Asad Hussein, a Somali refugee born in the Dadaab Refugee Complex in Kenya, who won a full scholarship to Princeton. After fleeing the Somali Civil War in 1991, Asad’s family were among the hundreds of thousands of residents “kept alive but prevented from living” at Dadaab. The family clung to the hope of making it to America, and, in 2004, nine-year-old Asad and his family were called for medical exams, the first step in the resettlement process. The male nurse in charge of the clinic asked to marry Asad’s 14-year-old sister, however; when she refused, the family’s resettlement case stalled. Meanwhile, Asad, an avid reader and aspiring writer, sought a way out through academics, eventually winning a scholarship to a boarding school in Nairobi and then becoming the first refugee from Dadaab accepted to Princeton, where he started in the fall of 2018. His parents had arrived in the U.S. in early 2017, just beating President Trump’s ban on refugees from Somalia and other Muslim-majority countries. McCormick enriches the story with vivid character profiles and history lessons, using Asad’s story to illuminate the plight of refugees around the world. This heart-wrenching account ends on a high note.

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  • English

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