The Fourth of July is a day intended to unite us, all of us, this nation founded and enriched by immigrants from all over the world.
We may sometimes look different, sound different and believe different things, but we are Americans, all of us.
Nowhere is our diversity celebrated more joyously than it is in modern literature, so volunteers from the Tucson Festival of Books were invited to suggest some books to help us celebrate the many unique journeys that have led us all here to the United States.
βSolitoβ by Tucsonan Javier Zamora is a remarkable memoir recounting Zamoraβs 3,000-mile journey from El Salvador to the United States. Alone. At the age of 9. One of last yearβs most honored works of nonfiction, Zamoraβs story helps us understand the desperation and vulnerability of those approaching our southern border today. β Margie Farmer
βIf I Survive Youβ by Jonathan Escoffery is a collection of interconnected stories that follow a family of Jamaican immigrants trying to make their way in Miami. The book features Trelawny, the younger son, who struggles to understand just who he is and how he fits in in America. β Emily Walsh
βThe American Wayβ by Helene Stapinski and Bonnie Siegler reminds us how the American dream could come true in the years following World War II. It features Jules Schulback, Sieglerβs grandfather. He had fled Nazi Germany for the U.S. Siegler remembered him as a teller of tall tales until she discovered one of them was true. Schulback had, indeed, taken the iconic photo of Marilyn Monroe with her white dress billowing on a New York street. Wait, thereβs more! β Thea Chalow
βThe Candid Life of Meena Daveβ by Namrata Patel is the story of an adopted woman in her 30s who mysteriously inherits a Boston apartment and makes discoveries about herself through friendships with her new neighbors. She learns there is the family youβre born with and the one you choose for yourself. This is a beautiful peek into the culture of India and Indian-American history. βΒ Jeiza Quinones Ivory
βCrying In H Martβ by Michelle Zauner has now spent 64 weeks on the New York Times bestseller list because it is a tale that resonates with so many of us who struggle to find their place in the world around them. Herself Korean and one of the few Asian Americans in her Oregon schools, Zauner reflects on her journey, and the steps she now knows were the ones that mattered. β Sara Hammond
βAll My Rageβ by Sabaa Tahir captured last yearβs National Book Award for young personsβ literature. Written for young adults, it a story of two young Pakistani immigrants as they navigate family, forgiveness, love and loss in the small desert town of Juniper, California. β Emily Walsh
βKillers of the Flower Moonβ by David Grann reads like a novel but is a deeply researched work of history about a series of Oklahoma murders in the 1920s. The victims were Osage, all of them owners of land where oil had been discovered. As the death toll rose, a new government agency called the FBI took up the search for a killer β¦ or killers. First published in 2017, the book has been re-released in anticipation of a movie adaptation scheduled for release in October. β Abby Mogollon
βBetter Living Through Birdingβ by Christian Cooper may not be a book youβd always consider, but consider this: The author is the Black birdwatcher who became the center of a cultural firestorm one morning in Central Park. Cooperβs American moment came in May 2020, when a white woman who was walking her dog called the police β falsely saying Cooper had threatened her. βBetter Livingβ is not a story about that, but instead is a memoir and travelogue detailing Cooperβs love of nature β¦ and how much we could learn from birds if we would only look and listen. β Abby Mogollon
βAnder and Santi Were Hereβ by Jonny Garza Villa features a nonbinary teen who has decided to take a gap year before college to paint beautiful murals in his community. He befriends and eventually falls for an undocumented boy who comes to work at the family restaurant. β Jessica Pryde
β66 on 66β by Terrence Moore is a picture book for history buffs, a collection of 66 stunning photographs Moore has taken of the people and places along Route 66. Still a symbol of Americana, Route 66 extends from the Santa Monica Pier in Los Angeles to the Institute of Art in Chicago. The 2,448 miles in between? Thatβs where America lives. β Lynn Wiese Sneyd
βThe Wind Knows My Nameβ by Isabel Allende explores the sacrifices that parents must sometimes make to protect their kids. The book is framed by two immigrant children. The first is Samuel Adler, a 5-year-old traveling alone from Germany to England in 1938. The second features Anita Diaz, a 7-year-old fleeing El Salvador for the U.S. in 2019 only to be separated from her mother in Nogales. β Bill Finley