2020 Winner of The Christy Award for Young Adult!

2020 Winner of The Christy Award for Young Adult!

 
Honorable Mention for the Selah Award in the Young Adult category!

Honorable Mention for the Selah Award in the Young Adult category!

 
Honorable Mention for the 2020 Writer’s Digest Self-Published Book Awards!

Honorable Mention for the 2020 Writer’s Digest Self-Published Book Awards!

 

The Means That Make Us Strangers

Home is where your people are. But who are your people?

Adelaide has lived her whole life in rural Ethiopia as the white American daughter of an anthropologist. Then her family moves to South Carolina, in 1964. 

Adelaide vows to find her way back to Ethiopia, marry Maicaah, and become part of the village for real. But until she turns eighteen, Adelaide must adjust to this strange, white place that everyone tells her is home. Then Adelaide becomes friends with Wendy and the four other African-American students who sued for admission into the white high school. Even as she navigates her family's expectations and her mother's depression, Adelaide starts to enjoy her new friendships, the chance to learn new things, and the time she spends with a blond football player. Life in Greenville becomes interesting, and home becomes a much more complex equation.

Adelaide must finally choose where she belongs: the Ethiopian village where she grew up, to which she promised to return? Or this place where she's become part of something bigger than herself?

 
An extraordinary and original novel... A deftly crafted and impressively entertaining story from first page to last.
— Midwest Review of Books
 
Powerful... Teen readers interested in the civil rights era will be enthralled by this nuanced story of race relations in the 1960s American South, seen through the eyes of a white girl raised in Ethiopia.
— BookLife
Entertaining and engaging... Adelaide is a wonderful protagonist.
— Reviews from the Stacks