Sunday, March 6, 2022

Escape from Aleppo by NH Senzai




Nadia is living through the Arab Spring. She has memories of happier times - shopping, visits to hair salons, new clothes and her large extended family enjoying everyday life. Then the civil war begins. Nadia herself is hit with shrapnel and her family decide to flee but Nadia is left behind. She knows where her father and mother are heading. It is not a great distance in normal circumstances but now there is danger everywhere and Nadia must travel on foot through the dangerous city. She meets a mysterious stranger - Ammo Mazen. He has a cart and a donkey and a puzzling network of connections all over Aleppo. Should Nadia trust this man? Why is he offering to help her? Two other young boys join their tiny group. Nadia now needs to protect them too. But time is running out. Will her family still be waiting at the border? 

I have listed Escape from Aleppo as a Young Adult title. I would recommend it (highly) for readers aged 12+. 

Here are a couple of text quotes from this first person narrative which takes place over just five days:

"A surge of relief flooded through Nadia as she eyed the old man. She knew better than to assume he was no threat, but at least he didn't look like a soldier or a cold-blooded assassin."

"They emerged onto one of the main arteries that ran through the bazaar, lit by skylights embedded in the vaulted ceiling, revealing the extent of the destruction. Nothing much of the souq's rich glory remained, except for hints of the past, strewn on the floor: turquoise shards of pottery, a muddied rug, and torn wisps of bright silk."

Through Nadia’s conversations with other characters and through extensive exposition, readers learn about the impressively vast and complex history of Aleppo and of Syria. The Arab Spring is also treated in detail. Nadia’s flashbacks give insight to life under dictatorship and the drastic changes introduced by war. Kirkus

Escape from Aleppo is a must-read middle grade novel for understanding the evolution of the current political environment in the troubled country of Syria. Ms Yingling

Here is an interview with the author. And here are some teaching ideas and link from the School Library Journal

In 2013 I talked about a previous book by NH Senzai - Shooting Kabul. I loved Shooting Kabul - such a haunting story - which is why I ordered Escape from Aleppo.


In some high school English classes students are encouraged to read widely on a topic.  Escape from Aleppo should be included with these other wonderful books about the war in Syria:







I would also pair this book with Orange's in No Man's Land which has a similar harrowing journey across a war zone and through dangerous check points. 



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