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Dreaming of Home by Cristina Jiménez
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Dreaming of Home

How We Turn Fear Into Pride, Power, and Real Change

St. Martin's Press · 2025-05-27

Dreaming of Home: How We Turn Fear Into Pride, Power, and Real Change

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Who It's For

  • Good for readers who enjoy BIOGRAPHY & AUTOBIOGRAPHY / Hispanic & Latino
  • Good for readers interested in memoir
  • Strong fit for readers who prefer grounded, real-world context.

What You Get

  • Themes: Memoir, City, United.
  • Reading lane: Hispanic & Latino and Biography & Memoir.
  • Publisher: St. Martin's Press.

About This Book

NOW A NATIONAL BESTSELLER! "Essential reading ...entirely suited to a turbulent moment." — Washington Post A MacArthur “Genius” shares her inspiring story, from undocumented newcomer to leader in a powerful immigrant youth movement. Dreaming of Home is a coming-of-age story for both a young woman finding her true self and a social movement of immigrant youth trailblazers who inspired the world and changed the lives of millions. Cristina Jiménez’s family fought to stay afloat...

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NOW A NATIONAL BESTSELLER! "Essential reading ...entirely suited to a turbulent moment." — Washington Post A MacArthur “Genius” shares her inspiring story, from undocumented newcomer to leader in a powerful immigrant youth movement. Dreaming of Home is a coming-of-age story for both a young woman finding her true self and a social movement of immigrant youth trailblazers who inspired the world and changed the lives of millions. Cristina Jiménez’s family fought to stay afloat as Ecuador fell into a political and economic crisis. When she was thirteen, her family came to the US seeking a better life, landing in an overcrowded one-bedroom apartment in Queens, New York. She lived in fear of deportation and ashamed of being undocumented, but eventually, Cristina discovered she was not alone. She made it into college when students and advocates won a change in the law, allowing undocumented students to access higher education. She was proud to be the first one in her family to go to college, but she felt out of place until she met professors and student activists who opened a new world where she found her calling within a community of social justice organizers. With deep candor and humor, Cristina shows us what it’s like to grow up undocumented and the reality that being a “good” immigrant doesn’t shield you from systemic racism, danger—or even the confusion of falling in love. She invites us to acknowledge the America that never was and to imagine the America that could be when everyday people come together, build power, and fight for change, even when the world around us seems to be crumbling.

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