Once We Are Safe Audiobook By Alessandra Carati, Linda Worrell - translator, Laura Masini - translator cover art

Once We Are Safe

A Novel

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Once We Are Safe

By: Alessandra Carati, Linda Worrell - translator, Laura Masini - translator
Narrated by: Lauren Ezzo
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In this award-winning novel from Italy, a family is forced to flee their home on the brink of the Bosnian War, leaving behind all that they know and forging ahead into a life they never asked for.

Aida is just six years old when her family escapes the war bearing down on their village in Bosnia. But survival comes at a price. The home they make in Italy is safe, though not their own. Aida watches, helpless, as her parents grapple with a guilt and nostalgia she doesn’t understand. They yearn for a place that no longer exists, a place she barely remembers yet comes to resent for its lingering ghost.

Not even the arrival of her baby brother seems to spark their hope for the future, but Aida refuses to drown in the past with her parents. As the family sinks deeper into grief and the scars of mental illness, Aida makes her own way forward, through adolescence and into adulthood, constantly searching for where she belongs.

Aida and her family face their struggles quietly and alone, until tragedy forces them to come together once again. But amid the greatest heartbreak, hope always rises…even when it feels like there’s nothing left.

©2021 by Mondadori Libri S.p.A. (P)2025 Brilliance Publishing, Inc., all rights reserved. Translation © 2025 by Linda Worrell and Laura Masini.
Family Life Genre Fiction Historical Fiction World Literature Heartfelt Tearjerking War
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To be fair, I may have rated this book higher if I hadn’t gone into it with certain expectations. I believed it would focus more on the war and experience of refugees. While those topics were in there, the greater part of the book was on the aftermath and followed a family trying to manage the trauma they’d experienced. The book was more a focus on mental health and the long lasting scars after the war than they were about being in the midst of it. The narrator did a fine job and the story itself was well written although some parts felt rushed or like they were lacking details.

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