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6. Read a book about exile

Our staff recommends:

Read a book about exile

Reading about exile is not the first thing that springs to mind when you’re looking for some light entertainment on a Tuesday evening. And rightly so.

For books about exile will do exactly the opposite. They will move and unsettle you; challenge you to leave the comfort of your old convictions and permanently change both you and your Tuesday.

They will not necessarily tell you the things you want to hear, but the ones you don’t; the necessary things that can’t remain unsaid. They might scare the life out of you. Make you witness some heartbreaking moments which lie beyond our language, comprehension and humanity. They might introduce you to strange characters, customs, and places. Make fun of your culture and your language. And make you feel, as something grand begins to collapse in you, that a hand has come out and taken your own.

Sounds tough and unsettling? Yes, and isn’t that precisely what good books are for?


Book of the month!

Simple Acts recommends...

Check out our book of the month

We're not literary buffs or anything but we know what we like, so every month we're going to highlight a book that we've loved.

And here's a whole load of other books on exile

We've put together a massive list of books about exile for you. With plot synopses, reviews, author information and links what are you reading this for?

Read our simple step-by-step guide to reading a book about exile!

It oh so easy

Paddington Bear shares a story especially for Refugee Week

Through a story written by Michael Bond as part of the Simple Acts campaign, Paddington bear tells of his arrival in Britain and how a sticky paw can make the UK more welcoming for other refugees.

Read Paddington Bear's Simple Act


Add you action to the Action Counter

Some food for thought...

Food for thoughtThat exile is changing voltages and kilohertz, life with an adapter, so we don't burn ourselves. That exile is the history of our temporary rented apartments, the first lonely mornings as we spread out the map of the town in silence, find on the map the name of our street and mark it with a cross in pencil.
Dubravka Ugresic

Food for thoughtI will not serve that in which I no longer believe whether it call itself my home, my fatherland or my church: and I will try to express myself in some mode of life or art as freely as I can and as wholly as I can, using for my defence the only arms I allow myself to use, silence, exile, and cunning.
James Joyce

Food for thoughtIt is part of morality not to be at home in one's home.
Theodro Adorno

Food for thoughtIf Englishness doesn’t define me, then redefine Englishness.
Andrea Levy

Food for thoughtThe language I have learnt these forty years,
My native English, now I must forgo,
And now my tongue’s use is to me no more
Than an unstringèd viol or a harp.
William Shakespeare

Food for thoughtMost people are principally aware of one culture, one setting, one home; exiles are aware of at least two, and this plurality of vision gives rise to an awareness of simultaneous dimensions, an awareness that -- to borrow a phrase from music--is contrapuntal.
Edward Said

Completed Actions

We read a book called The Lotus Seed about a girl who leaves her country.

msharda
Salusbury Primary school
24 June 2011 08:49 AM

we read the story 'when we lived in uncle's hat

msharda
Salusbury
24 June 2011 08:45 AM

I'm reading Edward W. Said's Memoir "Out of Place"

Merryn Hook
London
22 June 2011 08:08 AM

I read Death in Venice many years ago, but I never knew Thomas Mann was a refugee

Karen
Northampton
21 June 2011 11:32 AM

Just finished reading Harrare North by Brian Chikwawa - great

Al
London
17 November 2010 10:35 AM

I just finished reading a book about a refugee. The title of the book is 'Refugee Boy' by Benjamin Zephaniah.

Tsegai Bereketeab
England
01 November 2010 11:45 PM

I am writing an MA dissertation on Child Soldiers, so have been reading a number of books on the subject, including Ishmael Beah's 'A long way gone: memoirs of a boy soldier' http://www.alongwaygone.com/ and David Rosen's 'Armies of the Young: Child Soldiers in War and Terrorism'. Great books!

Kirsten
London
25 June 2010 12:46 PM

I'm currently reading 'The Other Hand' by Chris Cleave about asylum in the UK.

Jo Foster
Norwich
21 June 2010 02:13 PM

Read "I saw Ramallah' by Mourid Barghouti

jacky jacobs
poole
20 June 2010 09:43 AM

i have read lost of tht book it was fun cool

lubna shirwa 3A
salusbury primary school
19 June 2010 05:44 PM

I read 'A Girl Named Disaster' which is about a 12 year old girl who has to flee from Mozambique to Zimbabwe all by herself, to escape a forced marriage.

Jessie
Hants
17 June 2010 02:21 PM

I read The River of Lost Footsteps by Thant Myint-U about the troubled history of Burma and the human rights abuses suffered by many of Burma's ethnic groups, now forced to live in exile in Thailand and Bangladesh.

Laura
London
17 June 2010 10:58 AM

I recently finished reading 'The Spirit Catches You and You Fall Down', a beautiful, funny, warming and heartbreaking story about a Hmong refugee family in the US and their young daughter with epilepsy. I highly recommend it!

Susannah
London
17 June 2010 09:45 AM

It is called "When Hitler stole pink rabbit by Judith Kerr

Jack Mullin
London
16 June 2010 01:49 PM

I read several books about exile and refugees with my kids, and blogged about them here:
http://www.playingbythebook.net/2010/06/16/fantastic-fiction-for-kids-thinking-about-life-as-a-refugee/

Zoe
Birmingham
16 June 2010 06:04 AM

I read a story about exile to the children they enjoyed it and listened keenly.

April (3m) T A
Salusbury Primary School
15 June 2010 01:26 PM

We read 'The Arrival' by Shaun Tan

5R
Salusbury Primary School
15 June 2010 11:05 AM

Went very well, children all joined in and were very enthusiastic.

ms gayle
queens park kilburn
15 June 2010 10:53 AM

Read the book "They Poured Fire on Us From the Sky" about the Lost Boys of Sudan.

Karen
Chicago, US - Freetown, Sierra Leone
14 June 2010 09:02 PM

Madness visible - a great book on the realities of war and exile. More importantly, it takes into account all sides, civilians and fighters.

Mareen
London
14 June 2010 08:02 PM

read some poems that refugees have written

skye kimber
london
14 June 2010 05:20 PM

I have just finished reading the Kite Runner

Antonia
London
14 June 2010 03:25 PM

120 children did 4 simple acts during assembly. First they all listened to a story, "The Colour of Home" about a refugee child arriving in a new school.

Ali Storrie
London
14 June 2010 10:00 AM

I've read Bluebird by Vesna Maric, it was beautifully written with an understated tone, at times very touching but unsentimetal. Makes you look at Hull in a new light as well! I'd highly recommend it!

Juliette
London
14 June 2010 09:56 AM

I read Brixton Beach, a story about refugees from Sri Lanka.

Harjyot Hayer
BRADFORD
14 June 2010 05:12 AM

I recently finished reading Mary Antin's - The Promised Land. Highly recommended

Gemma Wood
London
11 June 2010 11:27 AM

Our library reading group has read many books by or about refugees. Some of the best have been An Elegy for Easterly by Petina Gappah from Zimbabwe, In the Country of Men by Hisham Mattar from Libya, Persepolis by Marjane Satrapi from Iran, and The Devil That Danced on the Water by Aminatta Forna from Sierra Leone.

Fran Devine
Manchester
03 June 2010 12:01 PM

I read the Kite Runer. The book was amazing and beautifully written. It really opened my eyes to what life could be like for people who cannot call their own country their home any more. I cried through most of it but i would read another book like it because i think we need to understand what other people go through to really help them.

Erika Jones
Glasgow
19 May 2010 05:17 PM

Dave Egger's What is the What about Sudanese exile, loss of youth, dislocation. Truly excellent and inspiring.

Alex Fradera
Glasgow
19 May 2010 05:08 PM

I have organised this simple Acts campaign for my School. We have 750 pupils and 50+ staff member and we all will do at least one act during Refugee Week as part of our Diversity Celebration.

Tabassum Janjua
Sheffiied
19 May 2010 05:07 PM

Good, my friend and i read 'The Other hand' about Nigerian refugee

Mel
Brighton
19 May 2010 05:02 PM

great - have always wanted to read Paddington's new adventures and you guys helped me to make a difference doing it. have posted to my blog in celebration of Simple Acts. Cheers!

Cory
Sutton
19 May 2010 04:58 PM

I am reading "Fever Crumb" by Philip Reeve. It is the prequel to the Mortal Engines series which is about a post-nuclear war world where cities move around and eat each other. In Fever Crumb, our heroine is of mixed race and because of that her Mother has to leave her at birth. She then meets her Mother again when fleeing London, her city of birth. All a bit tenous maybe? But persecution based on race, having to flee where you live makes it relevant to the plight of refugees. By the way, it's a great read too.

Chris Eley
Leeds
19 May 2010 04:46 PM

Hello,
Ms Akeroyd's year 8 English class have all read "The Other Side of Truth" by Beverly Naidoo.
Along with other actions to widen their understanding of refugees.

Linzie Wishart
London
19 May 2010 04:28 PM