Book Descriptions
for Home Is Beyond the Mountains by Celia Barker Lottridge
From Cooperative Children's Book Center (CCBC)
This novel is based on actual events in northern Iran and Iraq in 1918 through the early 1920s. Nine-year-old Samira is an Assyrian girl who flees with her parents and two siblings from Turkish forces invading their Iranian village. Only Samira and her older brother, Benyamin, are alive by the time they reach the refugee camp near Baghdad. Despite their grief and exhaustion, the two establish a family-like relationship with other orphans, allowing them to form a strong community. After several years, a bold new orphanage director, Susan Shedd, decides to help the group of three hundred orphans return to Iran. They make the three-hundred-mile journey through the mountains on foot in the hopes of finding surviving members of their families. Celia Barker Lottridge is the niece of the real Susan Shedd. Her affecting novel is based on her aunt’s work, and also her mother’s memories of growing up in Persia. Lottridge’s historical account shows the children’s intense resilience and also their remarkable sense of responsibility for one another. (Age 12 and older)
CCBC Choices 2011. © Cooperative Children's Book Center, Univ. of Wisconsin - Madison, 2011. Used with permission.
From the Publisher
Nine-year-old Samira and her brother are forced to flee when the Turkish army invades northwestern Persia in 1918, barely surviving the journey and ending up at a refugee camp run by the British Army; after being sent to an orphanage, the director decides to lead the 300 refugee children back to their home villages--a journey of 300 miles--through the mountains, on foot.
Publisher description retrieved from Google Books.