Across a Hundred Mountains (Unabridged)
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- $14.99
Publisher Description
Winner of the American Book Award, Across a Hundred Mountains is a “timely and riveting” (People) novel about a young girl who leaves her small town in Mexico to find her father, who left his family to work in America—a story of migration, loss, and discovery.
After a tragedy separates her from her mother, Juana García leaves in search of her father, who left them two years earlier. Out of money and in need of someone to help her across the border, Juana meets Adelina Vasquez, a young woman who left her family in California to follow her lover to Mexico. Finding themselves—in a Tijuana jail—in desperate circumstances, they offer each other much needed material and spiritual support and ultimately become linked forever in the most unexpected of ways.
In Across a Hundred Mountains, Reyna Grande puts a human face on the controversial issue of immigration, helping readers to better understand “the desperation of illegal immigrants and the families they leave behind” (Entertainment Weekly) in pursuit of a better life.
APPLE BOOKS REVIEW
This stunning debut novel from Reyna Grande might just color the way you think about immigration forever. Juanita García hasn’t seen her father since the day he left their family’s small Mexican town, hoping to find work in America to help pay off their debts. Adelina Vasquez came to Mexico with her boyfriend, never imagining that leaving her family behind in California would find her turning to sex work. Drawing on her own experience as a young, undocumented immigrant, Grande uses alternating POVs to let us fully experience Juanita’s and Adelina’s separate, heart-wrenching journeys. And when their stories finally converge, it happens in a twist that’s too brilliant, moving, and unexpected for us to spoil here. Narrators Marisa Blake and Cynthia Farrell beautifully capture the differences in age and experience that make these two characters so compelling. Across a Hundred Mountains is an unforgettable journey across the border and into the human experience.
Customer Reviews
Great listen
This book is very extreme in a sense of every scenario becoming more and more challenging as the story progresses .