Rave
Jessica Goudeau,
The New York Times Book Review
Since the first allied attack on the Taliban in October 2001 began what many consider the longest war in U.S. history, few foreign journalists have written about Afghanistan with the depth and doggedness of the Kabul-based Canadian journalist Matthieu Aikins.
Rave
Terry W. Hartle,
The Christian Science Monitor
... compelling.
Rave
Elizabeth Hayford,
Library Journal
This is a magnificent book that skillfully conveys the hope, disappointment, physical hardship, and human connections of Omar’s endeavor. Even more impressively, Aikins integrates knowledge of modern Afghan history, the failures of American policy, and the complexities of Afghan culture, religion, and family relations.
Positive
Abhrajyoti Chakraborty,
The Guardian (UK)
Aikins is attuned to a truth seldom acknowledged by travel writers and foreign correspondents: when confronted by the plight of stateless subjects, or of those forced to escape their home countries, the reporter is always aware of their own luck, their own unearned prerogative of belonging to one nation and not another.
Rave
Oliver Balch,
The Spectator
This isn’t a reconstructed account, pasted together from secondhand sources; it is embedded journalism in the raw, a personal dispatch from behind the lines of Europe’s intractable migrant crisis.
Rave
Colleen Mondor,
Booklist
Whether ruminating on the strength of their love, the frustrations of paperwork, or the ever-changing rules for travel, Aikins leaves no detail uncovered in the travails of this family determined to find a better life. Timely, personal, and deeply human, this is a riveting look at the struggles of refugees, one of the world’s most enduring crises..
Rave
Kirkus
... riveting.
Positive
Publishers Weekly
... powerful.