Now while most of what is written and illustrated by Don Brown in his 2018 (and 2019 Sibert honour recipient) The Unwanted: Stories of the Syrian Refugees has sadly not been all that personally new and surprising to and for me, it was and remains both textually and visually informative as well as majorly thought-provoking to have this all so powerfully and devastatingly shown in a graphic novel format (emotionally moving, painful, essential information and details, but truly, The Unwanted: Stories of the Syrian Refugees is also and most definitely not a book I would consider all that suitable for younger children and indeed, even with older children and teenagers, both Don Brown's printed words and especially many of the illustrated images of war, of strife, violence and death might well make The Unwanted: Stories of the Syrian Refugees too much for some to handle, even if this book indeed does depict and describe the unfortunate and often rather painfully ugly truth).
However and the above all having been said, and albeit that I have found The Unwanted: Stories of the Syrian Refugees a detailed and also for a graphic novel amazingly well and meticulously researched introduction to the Syrian refugee crisis (with the listed source notes and the extensive bibliography at the back being very much academically appreciated added bonuses), on an entirely personal and internal level, I am sorry to say that I have found Don Brown's illustrations often more than a trifle overly stereotypical in appearance and scope, with ALL of his human figures (both Syrian and non Syrian) appearing to my eyes as either representationally "good" (the Syrian refugees) or "bad" (Jihadists, ISIS fighters, European protesters) but not really ever all that much as individuals with unique facial expressions, personalities and emotions (except of course fear, anger and hatred).
And furthermore (and to and for me, this is a much more potentially serious side-issue with The Unwanted: Stories of the Syrian Refugees), I do find it at best a trifle sad and frustratingly blinkered that while Don Brown (who is American) and yes with more than ample justification displays a much necessary critical viewpoint towards European (including Russian) approaches (and their collective animosities) towards the Syrian refugees migrating often en masse into countries like Greece, Italy, the United Kingdom, France, Germany etc. and also points out that MOST wealthy Middle Eastern nations (Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, Oman, Bahrain, the United Arab Emirates) have done almost NOTHING to help and have welcomed almost no Syrians into their respective countries, Don Brown obviously also and nevertheless refuses to criticise and accept the United States of America's own role in this horror and humanitarian crisis. For in my opinion, he is (or at least he seems) not willing to even remotely consider that recent and not so recent American foreign policies towards the Middle East have done much to not only destabilise the area but have also very actively enabled dictators like Assad and radical Islamic movements such as ISIS (something that really needed to at least have been mentioned and acknowledged in The Unwanted: Stories of the Syrian Refugees, no matter how uncomfortable this might be and no matter that this could even and perhaps likely offend some if not actually a goodly number of Don Brown's American readers).