Behind the Mountains
Edwidge Danticat
Orchard Books
2002
Ms. Hen decided to read this novel because she has read other books by this author. She saw it at a thrift shop, but could not carry it with her, but she went back a month later, and it was still there.
This novel is about a thirteen-year old girl named Celiane in rural Haiti. She receives a journal from her teacher, and writes about her life. She is intelligent and gets good grades in school. She lives with her mother and brother, but her father lives in New York. He sends them money, and they plan to move there to live with him.
Celiane and her mother and brother visit her father's sister, Tante Rose, in the city. She works as a nurse, and is successful. Elections are happening, and violence erupts in the city and all over the country. Tante Rose helps the family gets visas to New York after a bomb hits their van while they were on the way home. The family goes to New York.
This novel is very easy to read. Ms. Hen did not realize that it's a novel for young adults until after she finished reading it. The book is very calming, even though there is violence, and parts are scary when Celiane is in the hospital, and she doesn't know if her mother is dead. Ms. Hen found this novel a stark contrast to the last novel she read, DAVID COPPERFIELD, which is long and winding, and complicated.
Ms. Hen thinks it's good to escape into a world which she knows nothing about, but is beautifully written. Being an immigrant is difficult, and this novel opens a window to what it means to leave your country, and live somewhere completely different. Ms. Hen has never left her country, but everyone has different issues, that is what makes the world a diverse and beautiful place.
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