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A Greek Tragedy

One Day, a Deadly Shipwreck, and the Human Cost of the Refugee Crisis

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1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
Five Days at Memorial meets Into the Raging Sea with this harrowing and moving true story of a devastating shipwreck during the biggest refugee crisis since World War II.
On October 28, 2015, a boat meant for only a few dozen passengers capsized off the coast of the Greek island of Lesvos. Hundreds of refugees, forced in desperation onto the overloaded boat manned by armed smugglers, were tossed into a roiling sea. The resulting loss of life, the largest in a single day during the crisis in the Aegean, shocked the world.

Now, after nearly a decade of research, interviews, and investigation, reporter Jeanne Carstensen has captured every detail of the dramatic twenty-four hours. This includes the recollections of the refugees' lives before they left their homes and a full account of the courageous rescue efforts of the Greek islanders and volunteers rushing to help, even as their government and the EU failed to act. In this remarkable narrative feat, Carstensen brilliantly showcases the extraordinary heroism of ordinary people in extreme circumstances.

In a world where forced migration is on the rise, A Greek Tragedy challenges us to confront our collective humanity. It's an unforgettable testament of our times and a compassionate depiction of the lengths to which a person will go to save another human being.
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    • Library Journal

      October 1, 2024

      Carstensen, an award-winning journalist, spent nearly a decade researching this work about the 2015 tragedy in which a boat meant to hold only a few dozen capsized into the Aegean Sea, tossing hundreds of refugees into the ocean to their deaths. Carstensen unravels what happened, and how, through first-hand accounts. Prepub Alert.

      Copyright 2024 Library Journal

      Copyright 2024 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

    • Kirkus

      February 15, 2025
      An up-close look at an ongoing calamity. Syria's civil war and America's debacles in Afghanistan and Iraq have forced millions to flee their homes; 35% of these are children. Many refugees attempt to reach Europe. In response, Western nations have hardened their hearts, built walls, and reinforced border guards, but desperate families keep trying. Journalist Carstensen follows four subjects in her searing first book: an Afghan bank official traveling with his wife and two children, a 13-year-old Afghan girl who flees with her parents and three siblings, a school counselor, and a young female artist from Syria. Immigration opponents maintain that these are the dregs of society. In fact, poor people rarely emigrate. It's too expensive. For example, the Afghan bank official pays smugglers $25,000 to convey his family to Europe. Simply crossing a few miles of ocean from Turkey to a Greek island costs thousands. Carstensen describes their miserable journey driven by rapacious, penny-pinching smugglers. The final leg to safety involves crossing five miles to Lesvos, a Greek island, on fragile rubber rafts or broken-down boats. In 2015 refugees began arriving--cold, wet, exhausted, often as bodies washed up on the shore. Greece's government was hostile and remains so; U.N. and international aid groups responded slowly, but Carstensen emphasizes a minority of islanders, local fishermen, and foreign volunteers who rescued many and provided food, shelter, and medical care so well that the island was nominated for a Nobel Peace Prize. She focuses on Oct. 28, 2015, when smugglers crammed 300 refugees into a decrepit hulk that fell to pieces halfway across. Despite heroic rescue efforts, about 80 died, more of them children because they spent hours in cold water and are more susceptible to hypothermia. Carstensen's four subjects survived, but not their families. A vivid snapshot of a broken asylum system.

      COPYRIGHT(2025) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • Booklist

      March 1, 2025
      On October 28, 2015, a decrepit boat overloaded with more than 350 refugees left Sivrice on the Turkish coast, attempting to cross the Aegean to Greece's island of Lesvos, an entry point into the EU for smugglers of refugees. In gale-force winds, the ship disintegrated midway across. Some people were trapped and sank with the boat as it fell apart; those thrown into the cold water either had no life jackets or inadequate ones. Horrified witnesses from both the Turkish and Greek sides jumped into action to rescue as many as possible. It was the largest loss of life in the ongoing refugee crisis caused by upheaval in Syria and Afghanistan. Interviews with survivors, residents of both Sivrice and Lesvos who stepped up, and international relief workers turn statistics into vivid portraits of desperate and heroic people. In her debut book, journalist Carstensen powerfully combines their stories with background about the political machinery that exacerbated both the refugee crisis and the response to the disaster, telling a contemporary history of heartbreaking loss with clarity and compassion.

      COPYRIGHT(2025) Booklist, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

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  • English

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