“A heartwrenching account. Provides a human face, both beautiful and scarred, for the undocumented. A must read.”–Kirkus Reviews, Starred Review
Adapted for young readers by Pulitzer Prize–winning journalist Sonia Nazario, Enrique’s Journey tells the remarkable true story of Enrique, a teenager from Honduras who embarks on a perilous journey across Mexico to find the mother who was forced to leave him years earlier in search of work in the United States.
Drawing on years of immersive reporting, Nazario chronicles Enrique’s determination as he faces extraordinary obstacles, while illuminating the complex choices families make in pursuit of safety, opportunity, and a better future. Both deeply personal and rigorously reported, this award-winning work of narrative nonfiction invites readers to explore resilience, family, immigration, and hope through the eyes of one young person.
This young readers edition includes an eight-page photo insert and an epilogue detailing what happened to Enrique and his family after the original adult publication.
“Nazario’s straightforward . . . journalistic writing style largely serves the complex, sprawling story effectively. A valuable addition to young adult collections.”—School Library Journal
“This powerfully written survival story personalizes the complicated, pervasive, and heart-wrenching debates about immigration and immigrants’ rights and will certainly spark discussion in the classroom and at home.”—Booklist
An NCSS-CBC Notable Social Studies Trade Book for Young People
A Kirkus Reviews Best Teen Book of the Year
A Junior Library Guild Selection
Author
Sonia Nazario
Sonia Nazario has spent 20 years reporting and writing about social issues, most recently as a projects reporter for the Los Angeles Times. Her stories have tackled some of this country’s most intractable problems: hunger, drug addiction, immigration.She has won numerous national journalism and book awards. In 2003, her story of a Honduran boy’s struggle to find his mother in the U.S., entitled “Enrique’s Journey,” won more than a dozen awards, among them the Pulitzer Prize for feature writing, the George Polk Award for International Reporting, the Grand Prize of the Robert F. Kennedy Journalism Award, and the National Assn. of Hispanic Journalists Guillermo Martinez-Marquez Award for Overall Excellence.Expanded into a book, Enrique’s Journey became a national bestseller and won two book awards. It is now required reading for incoming freshmen at dozens of colleges and high schools across the U.S.In 1998, Nazario was a Pulitzer Prize finalist for a series on children of drug addicted parents. And in 1994, she won a George Polk Award for Local Reporting for a series about hunger among schoolchildren in California.Nazario has been named among the most influential Latinos by Hispanic Business Magazine and a “trendsetter” by Hispanic Magazine.Nazario, who grew up in Kansas and in Argentina, has written extensively from Latin America and about Latinos in the United States. She is now at work on her second book. She began her career at the Wall Street Journal, where she reported from four bureaus: New York, Atlanta, Miami, and Los Angeles. In 1993, she joined the Los Angeles Times. She serves on the advisory boards of the University of North Texas Mayborn Literary Non-fiction Writer’s Conference and of Catch the Next, a non-profit working to double the number of Latinos enrolling in college. She is also on the board of Kids In Need of Defense, a non-profit launched by Microsoft and Angelina Jolie to provide pro-bono attorneys to unaccompanied immigrant children.She is a graduate of Williams College and has a master’s degree in Latin American studies from the University of California, Berkeley. In 2010, Nazario received an honorary doctorate from Mount St. Mary’s College.
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