Claire Kohda Hazelton 

Tell Me How It Ends by Valeria Luiselli – review

These devastating essays document the terrifying experiences of unaccompanied children crossing from Mexico into the US
  
  

Valeria Luiselli
Valeria Luiselli’s book is based on her experiences as an interpreter for undocumented children arriving in the USA. Photograph: Alfredo Pelcastre

In 2012, the Mexican writer Luiselli caused a sensation with her haunting debut novel, Faces in the Crowd, in which her unhappy protagonist craved “narrative order.” In this sobering essay, based on Luiselli’s experience as an interpreter for undocumented child migrants crossing from Mexico into the US, the phrase “narrative order” reappears, this time to describe what’s lacking in their chaotic stories. Trauma, exhaustion, youth and mistrust make it difficult to make sense of the children’s experiences as she tries to help them fill out the intake questionnaires and piece together a defence against deportation.

Most have lost friends and relatives; 80% of girls and women have been raped (US civilian vigilantes and private ranch owners are known to “go out to hunt” undocumented migrants). In this compelling, devastating book, Luiselli documents the huge injustices done to the children by both the American and Mexican governments, and by the public who treat them as “illegal aliens”, rather than as what they truly are: refugees of war.

Tell Me How It Ends by Valeria Luiselli is published by 4th Estate (£6.99)

• This article was amended on 23 October 2017. As the result of an editing error an earlier version stated the book was about Mexican children. This has been corrected.

 

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