Exile of the Heart is a deeply moving and lyrical memoir by journalist Rasheed Abou-Elsamh, chronicling a lifelong search for belonging across borders, languages, and faiths.
Born into a diplomatic family, Rasheed grew up in Geneva and Brasília, suspended between cultures, cosmopolitan yet rootless, privileged yet unsure of where home truly was. His story unfolds through vivid, intimate vignettes that reveal the beauty and ache of living between worlds.
From quiet family moments shadowed by unspoken truths to the loneliness of exile and the freedom of self-discovery, Exile of the Heart captures what it means to find identity beyond geography or expectation.
Both tender and fearless, this memoir explores themes of faith, identity, displacement, and resilience, asking what it truly means to belong — and reminding readers that sometimes the truest home is the one we build within ourselves.
Exile of the Heart: A Memoir Across Three Continents documents the life of journalist Rasheed Abou-Elsamh. In a series of vignettes, he reflects on his multicultural upbringing in Geneva and Brasilia, growing up with an American mother and a Saudi Arabian father, and his professional life in Saudi Arabia and navigating government censorship.
Overall, I thought this a nice quick read, and I especially enjoyed the sections where the author spoke about his career. Personally, I would have like to have read even more about that. I would recommend it to those who are especially interested in journalism in this region of the world.
My main critique is that I found the writing style to be very simplistic, informal, and at times, very matter of fact. While it does improve towards the end, I don’t feel this style of writing suits this format. I also feel that the title “A Memoir Across Three Continents” was a bit misleading as it predominantly centres around the authors life and career in Saudi Arabia.
Thank you to NetGalley for providing me with an ARC copy in exchange for my review
Exile of the Heart by Rasheed Abou-Elsamh is a powerful, beautifully written memoir about identity, obligation, and belonging. Raised by an American mother and a Saudi father, Abou-Elsamh returns to Saudi Arabia after his education, honoring a promise to his family—while living as a gay man in a deeply conservative, censored society. His story is both intimate and expansive, weaving personal struggle with rich cultural and historical insight. The writing is elegant, informed, and deeply human. This is a moving meditation on exile, courage, and the cost of living truthfully.
Exile of the Heart: A Memoir Across Three Continents covers Rasheed Abou-Elsamh's story while reflecting on the concepts of home, life, love, and community. Being a gay journalist in Saudi Arabia, Abou-Elsamh documents his upbringing, coming out to his family, the censorship required to exist as a gay person in the Middle East, and how his relationships and sense of self have evolved throughout his life. While this was a quick read, it was incredibly heartfelt. Abou-Elsamh speaks with such depth about the loneliness and search for his sense of self in a really raw way.
Exile of the Heart was published 11/28/2025 and I received an advanced copy from Netgalley in exchange for my review.
⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ Review of Exile of the Heart: A Memoir Across Three Continents
Exile of the Heart is a beautifully composed and emotionally resonant memoir that captures the quiet complexity of growing up between cultures. Rasheed Abou-Elsamh writes with lyrical restraint, offering readers intimate glimpses into a life shaped by diplomacy, displacement, and the subtle ache of never fully belonging to one place. His reflections on childhood in Geneva and Brasília evoke both privilege and profound rootlessness, revealing how identity can be both enriched and unsettled by constant movement.
What makes this memoir especially compelling is its tenderness and clarity. Through vivid vignettes, Rasheed explores faith, family, exile, and self-discovery with honesty and nuance. The emotional depth lies not in dramatic spectacle but in the quiet revelations the unspoken truths within families, the loneliness beneath cosmopolitan polish, and the slow realization that belonging must often be built from within. It is a reflective, courageous work that will resonate deeply with anyone who has ever lived between worlds.
Rasheed Abou-Elsamh’s Exile of the Heart is a brilliantly written memoir that immerses readers in a multicultural odyssey, following the author and journalist across three continents and multiple countries. From childhood in Geneva, Cairo, and Brasília to professional life in Saudi Arabia and the Philippines, Rasheed vividly depicts the emotional landscape of cultural dislocation. His honest portrayal of loneliness, love, and the quest for belonging is both raw and poetic. The narrative’s stream-of-consciousness reveals a deeply introspective mind grappling with identity and exile. Rasheed’s insights into the universal need for connection and home are poignant and profound. This memoir is a testament to resilience, offering a fresh perspective on the immigrant’s journey through a beautifully crafted lens.
This an excellent short memoir by a gay, Saudi-American journalist as he moved from Geneva, Brasilia, Philadelphia, to Jeddah in Saudi Arabia. In a series of vignettes he describes journalism (with self-censorship in the Middle East), coming out to his Muslim family, and his many friendships and relationships around the world. I enjoyed it and learned a lot. Highly recommended to those interested in LGBTQ+ stories of the Arab World and international journalism.
Exile of the Heart: A Memoir Across Three Continents by Rasheed Abou-Elsamh tells the author's story while offering a spellbinding meditation on home, love, and belonging. His stories of childhood in Geneva, Cairo, and Brasília, coupled with his career in journalism, paint a vivid picture of cultural shock and longing. It is a deeply moving memoir that those who have experienced being uprooted from home and cast into a foreign world will relish.
Exile of the Heart improves prose-wise the further on you read - at first the style seemed overly-simplistic and informal. The narrative is somewhat linear but at times the chapters jumped around chronologically which was a little disorienting. Nor did I feel as if this truly was a memoir across three continents as the title and blurb suggest. Abou-Elsamh focuses mostly on his time in Saudi Arabia rather than growing up in Geneva or living in Brasilia. But, I did enjoy the insight this memoir provides into being gay while living and working in Saudi Arabia; from this perspective Abou-Elsamh's memoir is very important and still worth reading even if it does lack a little finesse structurally.