"[Marcom's] telling resonates with heartbreaking authenticity. And despite the travails she is describing, Marcom's writing is vibrant and often poetic....Today's headlines will not let us forget that thousands of other children riding the Bestia. Marcom's compassionate novel illuminates their painful journey."--NEW YORK JOURNAL OF BOOKS
"[An] emotionally piercing, compulsively readable novel." --SAN FRANCISCO CHRONICLE
"[Marcom] depicts inhumanity with visceral force, but her bracing empathy (and hope) shines above all."--ENTERTAINMENT WEEKLY
"Inspired in part by interviews with Central American refugees, and told in lyrical prose, Micheline Aharonian Marcom's novel The New American tracks the heart-pounding and fictional journey of a dreamer, a term referring to young undocumented immigrants who were brought to the United States as children, who have lived and gone to school here, and who, in many cases, identify as American."--FORTUNE
"Inspired by interviews with Central American refugees, the latest captivating novel by Micheline Aharonian Marcom centers a Dreamer named Emilio, who is determined to return to California after being deported."--MS. MAGAZINE
"We need books like The New American, by Micheline Aharonian Marcom, which sweeps you into an uncomfortable reality, expands your heart, and helps you see through the eyes of a dreamer fighting to regain a lost promise. The world within its pages is unflinching and cruel but brims with hope and beauty. A catalyst for connection and empathy, The New American is also an immersive page-turner that will keep you reading eagerly to its conclusion."--NECESSARY FICTION
"Marcom's prose is steady and soulful...and the narrative is deepened by a series of lyrical interludes describing dangerous journeys of unnamed refugees...Marcom's remarkable tale credibly captures the desperation and despair of those who undertake the dangerous trek north." --PUBLISHERS WEEKLY (Starred Review)
"[A] harrowing, heartbreaking story...Marcom's plotting and pacing are well honed, and her prose is often revelatory...a gripping novel."--KIRKUS
"Marcom has penned a lyrical mediation on being and becoming, identity and anonymity, and the ambiguity of place." - LIBRARY JOURNAL (starred review)
"[A] poetic nightmarescape that hums with foreboding and the anguish of lost innocence....Marcom masterfully navigates the graphic ugliness of deportation and anguished immigration with entreaties to a remote and capricious God, creating a tough but necessary and beautiful novel."--BOOKLIST