Award-winning Mexican author Juan Pablo Villalobos explores illegal
immigration with this emotionally raw and timely nonfiction book about
ten Central American teens and their journeys to the United States.
You can't really tell what time it is when you're in the freezer.
Every year, thousands of migrant children and teens cross the
U.S.-Mexico border. The journey is treacherous and sometimes deadly, but
worth the risk for migrants who are escaping gang violence and poverty
in their home countries. And for those refugees who do succeed? They
face an immigration process that is as winding and multi-tiered as the
journey that brought them here.
In this book, award-winning Mexican author Juan Pablo Villalobos strings
together the diverse experiences of eleven real migrant teenagers,
offering readers a beginning road map to issues facing the region. These
timely accounts of courage, sacrifice, and survival--including two
fourteen-year-old girls forming a tenuous friendship as they wait in a
frigid holding cell, a boy in Chicago beginning to craft his future
while piecing together his past in El Salvador, and cousins learning to
lift each other up through angry waters--offer a rare and invaluable
window into the U.S.-Central American refugee crisis.
In turns optimistic and heartbreaking, The Other Side balances the
boundless hope at the center of immigration with the weight of its risks
and repercussions. Here is a necessary read for young people on both
sides of the issue.