"A beautifully written memoir about finding home, from an author who is multiply exiled. Told from the heart,
The Girl From Foreign performs the unique feat of making the foreign feel familiar."
-Suketu Mehta
author of Maximum City: Bombay Lost and Found
"A deeply moving journey across boundaries that most others find uncrossable, and into depths of human meaning that are rarely plumbed. An important and timely book."
-James Carroll
author of Constantine's Sword:The Church and the Jews
"The Girl From Foreign unfolds like a series of miniatures or dreams - a synagogue in the heart of Bombay so bereft of Jews that its caretaker is a Muslim, a sixteen-year-old Pakistani girl welcomed to Kansas by a marching band playing 'For She's a Jolly Good Fellow', secrets from another generation which have migrated froma Jewish to a Muslim household, locked and forgotten until a key arrives from America to free them. Intricately plotted, deeply moving, and beautifully written, the story of Sadia Shepard's journey into her grandmother's past proves that faith and memory and love will always be inextricable."
-Deborah Baker
author of The Blue Hand
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"Part travelogue, part elegy to a beloved grandmother, and part love affair, The Girl From Foreign is a remarkable, moving and refreshingly honest account of a young woman's search for roots, for belief and a place to belong."
-Alice Greenway
author of White Ghost Girls
"Sadia Shepard writes with compassion and humility about her journey to discover the disparate forces - cultural, ethnic, and religious - the make up her identity. On the way, we learn about the diversity and plurality of a rapidly transforming Indian Subcontinent, we discover the love story that brought Sadia's grandparents together, and finally, we are reminded through the intimate and touching portrait of her family, of all the mysteries that shape who we are."
-Tahmima Anam
author of The Golden Age
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