Book Descriptions
for The Road from Home by David Kherdian
From The Jane Addams Children's Book Award
Veron Dumehjian, an Armenian girl, lives comfortably with her family in Azizya, Turkey in the first years of the twentieth century; this changes forever when, in 1915, the government announces its intent to exterminate the Armenian people from its land. Forced on a death march across the "endless desert" and into neighboring Syria, Veron and her family endure unimaginable living conditions, starvation, cruelty, sickness, and death. Both refugee and orphan by age eleven, Veron moves from Syria to Greece to Italy and finally to the United States as a bride promised to an Armenian refugee living in Racine, Wisconsin. Through it all, Veron draws strength from her Armenian culture, a culture that tells her that "at the end of every bad road, a good road begins." Writing in the first-person voice of his mother, Kherdian emphasizes the power of his mother's courage and hopeful determination as he details the depth of her anguish and loss as a result of genocide.
The Jane Addams Children’s Book Award: Honoring Peace and Social Justice in Children’s Books Since 1953. © Scarecrow Press, 2013. Used with permission.
From the Publisher
David Kherdian re-creates his mother's voice in telling the true story of a childhood interrupted by one of the most devastating holocausts of our century. Vernon Dumehjian Kherdian was born into a loving and prosperous family. Then, in the year 1915, the Turkish government began the systematic destruction of its Armenian population.
Publisher description retrieved from Google Books.