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  • Published: 5 July 2012
  • ISBN: 9780099555452
  • Imprint: Vintage
  • Format: Paperback
  • Pages: 224
  • RRP: $26.00

In the Sea There Are Crocodiles




A beautiful, heartbreaking novel based on the true story of an Afghan boy's journey in search of a place to call home.

I read somewhere that the decision to emigrate comes from a need to breathe.

The hope of a better life is stronger than any other feeling. My mother decided it was better to know I was in danger far from her; but on the way to a different future, than to know I was in danger near her; but stuck in the same old fear.

At the age of ten, Enaiatollah Akbari was left alone to fend for himself. This is the heartbreaking, unforgettable story of his journey from Afghanistan to Italy in an attempt to find a safe place to live.

  • Published: 5 July 2012
  • ISBN: 9780099555452
  • Imprint: Vintage
  • Format: Paperback
  • Pages: 224
  • RRP: $26.00

About the author

Fabio Geda

Born in Turin in 1972, Fabio Geda is an Italian novelist who works with children in difficulties. He writes for several Italian magazines and newspapers, and teaches creative writing in the most famous Italian school of storytelling (Scuola Holden, in Turin). In the Sea There Are Crocodiles is his first book to be translated into English.

Praise for In the Sea There Are Crocodiles

What happens to Enaiatollah - from selling sweets beside street urchins in Quetta to working on the construction of the Olympic venues in Athens - is rarely pleasant. The threat of arrest and deportation is constant, with worse to fear at the hands of traffickers... And so it goes on, almost unimaginable horrors related with a lack of sentiment and bombast that makes their description all the more remarkable. We know this story ends well for Enaiatollah; it might be too awful if it didn't. Innocence remains uncrushed... A remarkable story

Financial Times

A beautifully written and moving book

Choice

The personal stories of refugees and their life-or-death battles are usually lost in between the lines of news reports. In direct and undecorated prose, Fabio Geda beautifully delivers the human experience of Enaiatollah, a ten-year-old Afghani boy, whose will for survival is more than remarkable. In the Sea There Are Crocodiles will make you laugh and cry, and it will also make you a better person. Everyone should read this book

Marina Nemat, author of 'Prisoner of Tehran'

A moving and eye-opening account chronicles hardships no child should have to endure, mitigated by intermittent kindnesses

Sunday Times

This little gem, beautifully and unobtrusively translated, will raise tears of sorrow and joy

Independent

If anything, this book is more chilling than heart-warming. Though Enaiatollah survives the Iranian shooting, the man next to him is killed. After a three-day journey in the false bottom of a lorry, during which he is unable to get out even to go to the toilet, he "pee[s] blood for the next few weeks". And though he survives the journey across the Aegean in an inflatable dinghy that comes, with oars, in a box ("an Ikea flatpack for illegals"), his young companion is tossed overboard in a storm and "taken by the darkness"... What is clear from this beautiful book is that young Enaiatollah finally reaches Turin and, much to his delight... finally goes back to school. An end one might go so far as to call heart-warming

The Times

A frank, revealing and clear-eyed testament of the experiences faced by a young asylum-seeker in the contemporary world

Diane Samuels, Guardian

A journey of true grit and determination for one so young in years. The story alone is superb; add in Enaiatollah's engaging prose and this books sings on the page. Highly recommended

Bookbag

The threat of arrest and deportation is constant, with worse to fear at the hands of traffickers... A remarkable story

Financial Times