Available August 12, 2025
Publicist:
Crystal Patriarche
BookSparks
crystal@BookSparksPR.com
(480) 650-1688
Publisher:
She Writes Press
(August 12, 2025)
Length: 256 pages
ISBN13: 9781647429409
Sonia Daccarett grew up with a Jewish mother and a Christian Palestinian father in Colombia during the drug-war 1980s. When she asks her parents questions about their family’s ethnicity and religion they answer evasively, defining their family religion and ethnicity as “nothing.” Grandparents and family members who speak Yiddish, Hebrew, and Arabic and fled from places called the Austro-Hungarian Empire, Russia, Bethlehem, and the Ottoman Empire, does not sound like “nothing” to Sonia.
At the same time, Sonia grapples with her American education at school. She is both enchanted and challenged by the tropical landscape of her childhood in a remote suburb of Cali, which is rapidly changing as cocaine trafficking and drug cartels begin to dominate the city’s life.
As she tries to discover what her family is, Colombia begins unraveling around her through violence, kidnappings, and the death of acquaintances and friends. At the same time, her parents’ marriage and their personal identities are rocked by the faraway Israeli invasion of Lebanon in 1982. Soon, she will have to decide whether to stay in Colombia with her family or leave them behind to find the answers she seeks.
BOOK REVIEWS
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"Sonia Daccarett’s beautiful, heartbreaking coming-of-age memoir is a powerful addition to contemporary Jewish literature. In telling her story of a Palestinian and Jewish family courageously attempting to live outside of history, she has deepened our understanding of the complexity of Jewish and Arab identity in our time."
- Yossi Klein Halevi, senior fellow, Shalom Hartman Institute, author, “Letters to My Palestinian Neighbor”
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"In The Roots of the GuavaTree, we are carried with the current of a girl’s coming of age amidst cultural reflections about a memorable family of secular, humanist parents in denial of the histories they inhabit. Full of wisdom and compassion. Irresistible."
- Marlena Maduro Baraf, Author, “At the Narrow Waist of the World”
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“As the child of nonconformists, Daccarett was always going to be facing life as an outsider, and in this exquisite memoir she presents a vivid portrait of both these diaspora communities as well as a country on the verge of cataclysmic change. . . . sharply observed, often moving, and always incisive recollections.”
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"About an intercultural childhood impacted by international tensions, The Roots of the Guava Tree is a revealing memoir."