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The Wind Knows My Name
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(BWF) The Wind Knows My Name / Isabel Allende - 4****
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It’s funny that a village in Italy is now inviting American refugees to apply for residency, sweetening the deal with housing for digital nomads.



It's a quick read, and that was my problem. Full of great situations and heroic characters, it just seemed to touch the surface.

I agree that a longer book might have given us more information / perspective.
But I suspect that Allende was unable to write more ... perhaps she felt as overwhelmed by the situation as I feel.
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The Wind Knows My Name – Isabel Allende
Book on CD performed by Edoardo Bellerini and Maria Liatis
4****
Allende explores the immigrant experience, and particularly the heart-wrenching separation of children from their parents with a dual timeline. In 1938 the Adlers send their son Samuel to Britain from Austria after the events of Kristallnacht make it clear that Jews are no longer safe in Nazi-occupied areas. And in 2019 in Arizona a Anita Diaz and her mother seek asylum after an arduous journey from their native El Salvador, only to be separated. How these two children handle the trauma is the focus of the novel.
My heart broke for both these families, though Allende gives us a dedicated social worker and attorney who passionately advocate for the disadvantaged youth. I particularly liked how the two storylines eventually connect, improbable though that may be.
Still, this was an emotionally difficult book to read. It pains me to recognize the similarities in the ways governments treat “others.” Apparently, we have learned nothing from history.
The audiobook is marvelously narrated by two very talented voice artists. Edoardo Bellerini handles most of the novel, while Maria Liatis gives voice to the seven-year-old Anita.
LINK to my review