harmonyhall's review against another edition

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5.0

What an amazing story! Please read this!

kukkamultatytto's review against another edition

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3.0

Another hard one to rate. I have nothing but utmost respect for Nujeen. She seems delightfully geeky and a sweet spirit, and anyone who has made the terrible journey from their war-torn home has my sympathy. I feel for them and admire the way they have the courage to build a new life.

However, this book did not touch me as much as I was expecting. There were moments when Nujeen's voice was there, but many parts lacked details and feelings altogether, it was like reading a newspaper, not a memoir. So three stars for the writing, more for the idea and the girl behind the book.

resath2002's review against another edition

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adventurous hopeful inspiring lighthearted medium-paced

5.0

aprilius_maximus's review against another edition

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3.0

I love how Nujeen not only told of her month long journey towards freedom, but she also addresses the entire migrant/refugee crisis and the racism, discrimination and fear towards them and how what we're told in the media isn't always true. Nujeen wants all refugees to be seen as PEOPLE, not just a number. She also addresses the fact that a lot of refugees didn't want to leave their country and hope to one day return there. She says that yes, looking after migrants costs money, but these people have skills and most are educated and can benefit any country they settle in. People are so against bringing in refugees and if the EU brought in all the 1.1 million Syrians who came to Europe, they would still only make up 0.2% of the population! This was not only inspiring and heartbreaking, but I also learnt a lot from this. I highly recommend it!

poisonivy's review against another edition

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4.0

this was such an eye-opening read for me. nujeen's story is so amazing and i loved not only reading about her journey but also getting to read about her childhood and what it was like for her growing up, along with learning more about the history of syria and the causes of the war. this is a great insight into what it's like growing up in a war-torn country and being a refugee, and i'd definitely call it a must-read!

bexi's review against another edition

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emotional informative sad medium-paced

mins80's review against another edition

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5.0

A must read

amberw27's review

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adventurous informative inspiring reflective medium-paced

3.0

whatsnonfiction's review against another edition

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4.0

I fell in love with Nujeen Mustafa, like many did, when Last Week Tonight host John Oliver used BBC interview clips of the teenage Syrian refugee at a way station on the Serbian-Hungarian border as she traveled to Germany with her sister. She was so sweet and optimistic despite her unimaginably difficult journey and experiences in the war-torn homeland she’d fled. And she was so unabashedly in love with Days of Our Lives, it was impossible not to be charmed by her. And at the same time, heartbroken for her – separated from her parents, on the way to an unknown destination through difficult terrain in European countries that were often less than welcoming to the flood of refugees fleeing ISIS and war in the Middle East. It’s a situation incomprehensible for us in the West, and in the last years it’s been the reality for thousands.

Nujeen, a Kurd originally from Manbij in northern Syria, tells her story with eloquence and a wisdom that exceeds her years, plus a rare talent that many adults don’t even have, of directly acknowledging her flaws and how she’s trying to learn and grow. It’s clear she’s had to grow up faster and differently than many her age, not only because of her life in the troubled Middle East but managing her physical struggles. Born with cerebral palsy, she’s confined to a wheelchair and tells in her memoir of the distance that disability created between her and other kids, even in her own family. At the same time, it helped her illuminate a life of the mind instead. Unable to easily leave her family’s fifth floor apartment in Aleppo, she became a TV fanatic but a smart one, consuming documentaries on all kinds of topics but with a special preference for science, space and nature, and of course honing her English with the melodrama of Days.

We learn a lot of what makes her tick – she likes entrepreneurs – Google’s Sergey Brin, Apple’s Steve Jobs; and she doesn’t like being deceived, whether that’s by manipulated marketing or government propaganda. It’s in passages like these that so much of her exuberant, optimistic personality shines through, and like John Oliver said, she would enrich any country lucky enough to have her. Her expression is certainly helped and shaped by co-author Christina Lamb, the British journalist and foreign correspondent for the Sunday Times. She’s written extensively about current events in the Middle East and also collaborated with Malala Yousafzi on 2013’s I Am Malala.

Now living with two of her sisters in a suburb of Cologne and still awaiting her official asylum permission, Nujeen writes about new difficulties she faces, like the prejudice against refugees and the challenge of going to school after a lifetime of self-education with TV documentaries at home. But she’s also had a lot of triumphs and been the recipient of small kindnesses shown to her and her sister, like a bag of chocolate from a German neighbor, or an iPad from fellow Days fans. She’s far more adept than some people twice her age at taking the good with the bad, and making the best of situations that would’ve broken others with her own brand of light, breezy philosophizing.

When refugees began arriving on European shores, they were faceless. Nujeen talks about this, pointing out the insensitivity of much of the language used to refer to them. She forces us to confront this, and to see them individually, the same as everyone else. It’s not such a big request.

I received an advance ebook copy for review courtesy of the publisher.

nanthesloth's review against another edition

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4.0

I'm so torn because I ADORE her and her story is incredible but at the same time I'm FURIOUS that what happened to her is happening to so many people while we do absolutely nothing.