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A flower traveled in my blood : the incredible true story of the grandmothers who fought to find a stolen generation of children / Haley Cohen Gilliland.

By: Material type: TextTextDescription: pages cmISBN:
  • 9781668017142 : HRD
  • 1668017148 : HRD
DDC classification:
  • 362.870982 23/eng/20250407
LOC classification:
  • HV6322.3.A7 C63 2025
List(s) this item appears in: Coming Soon
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Item type Current library Collection Shelving location Call number Status Date due Barcode Item holds
Adult Book Phillipsburg Free Public Library Adult Non-Fiction New Books 362.870982 GIL Ordered
Total holds: 0

Enhanced descriptions from Syndetics:

"Inspiring...A triumphant saga of ordinary people doing extraordinary things in the face of pure malevolence." --Hampton Sides * "Enthralling...Written with the nail-biting verve of a thriller." -- Publishers Weekly (starred review) * "Extraordinary...A harrowing and timely reminder of what happens when democracy succumbs to despotism." --Adam Higginbotham * "A heartbreaking and humane story of devotion and moral courage." --Robert Kolker * "Piercing, emotional...Will resonate for generations." -- Kirkus Reviews (starred review)

A remarkable new talent in narrative nonfiction delivers the epic true story of a group of courageous grandmothers who fought to find their grandchildren who were stolen.

In the early hours of March 24, 1976, the streets of Buenos Aires rumble with tanks as soldiers seize the presidential palace and topple Argentina's leader. The country is now under the control of a military junta, with army chief Jorge Rafael Videla at the helm. With quiet support from the United States and tacit approval from much of Argentina's people, who are tired of constant bombings and gunfights, the junta swiftly launches the National Reorganization Process or El Proceso --a bland name masking their ruthless campaign to crush the political left and instill the country with "Western, Christian" values. The junta holds power until 1983 and decimates a generation.

One of the military's most diabolical acts is kidnapping hundreds of pregnant women. After giving birth in captivity, the women are "disappeared," and their babies secretly given to other families--many of them headed by police or military officers. For mothers of pregnant daughters and daughters-in-law, the source of their grief is twofold--the disappearances of their children, and the theft of their grandchildren. A group of fierce grandmothers forms the Abuelas de Plaza de Mayo, dedicated to finding the stolen infants and seeking justice from a nation that betrayed them. At a time when speaking out could mean death, the Abuelas confront military officers and launch protests to reach international diplomats and journalists. They become detectives, adopting disguises to observe suspected grandchildren, and even work alongside a renowned American scientist to pioneer groundbreaking genetic tests.

A Flower Traveled in My Blood is the rarest of nonfiction that reads like a novel and puts your heart in your throat. It is the product of years of extensive archival research and meticulous, original reporting. It marks the arrival of a blazing new talent in narrative journalism. In these pages, a regime tries to terrorize a country, but love prevails. The grandmothers' stunning stories reveal new truths about memory, identity, and family.

Reviews provided by Syndetics

Publishers Weekly Review

Journalist Gilliland's enthralling debut recaps the decades-long battle by a group of Argentinian grandmothers, the Abuelas de Plaza de Mayo, to locate their grandchildren who were kidnapped by the junta in the 1970s. The "desaparecidos," or "the disappeared," were alleged "subversives"--mostly members of leftist groups--who were abducted, tortured, and killed by the military dictatorship's forces. Horrifyingly, those who were pregnant were allowed to wait to give birth before their executions so that junta members could clandestinely adopt the babies. Gilliland centers the story of one Abuela, Rosa Tarlovsky de Roisinblit, and her tireless search for her grandchild. Through Rosa, Gilliland follows the Abuelas as they employ every method at their disposal to find their grandchildren, from protesting at the risk of death to recruiting an American geneticist to develop testing to prove grandparental lineage, a scientific breakthrough that made them "pioneers of genetic genealogy." While the Abuelas succeeded in locating more than 130 grandchildren to great public fanfare, the book delves into how these discoveries led to further complications, including fierce custody battles and adult children's struggles with the revelation their parents were actually their kidnappers. Noting that several potential grandchildren resisted genetic testing, Gilliland also poses larger questions about identity ("Is it the sole property of an individual--or does their family and their society also have a right to truth?"). Written with the nail-biting verve of a thriller, this spotlights relentless perseverance in the face of unthinkable brutality. (July)

Booklist Review

Journalist Gilliland's first book is the true story of the Argentinean grandmothers who stood up against a tyrannical political regime in order to find the people that the government was disappearing. It is a recounting of Argentina's Dirty War (la guerra sucia) that took place during the 1970s and '80s and the circumstances that led to the military takeover of a country rife with political dissent. This book is certainly not easy to read, relating both personal stories of those who were disappeared and those who set out to find them as well as the political circumstances surrounding the leaders of the government and the civilians they set out to trample. The book opens with a vivid description of a citizen witnessing a disappearance and goes on to share the story of Patricia Julia Roisinblit from her birth to the destruction of everything she held dear. A Flower Traveled in My Blood is an unflinching playbook of what happens when a government's tyrannical impulses are fed as well as a heartbreaking, immersive account of what it means to stand up against injustice and demand that those who allow it move out of the way.

Kirkus Book Review

When women banded together to reunite families. In the last half of the 20th century, Argentina twitched chaotically, violently, between the working-class orientation of Eva and Juan Perón and the reactionary moral rigidity of Juan Carlos Onganía before a coup by Jorge Rafael Videla in 1976 forever reset the country's history. Under Videla's direction, a violent military junta kidnapped, tortured, and murdered thousands of Argentines (by some estimates as many as 30,000 who were deemed "subversives"). Centering the saga of the Roisinblits and their matriarch Rosa, journalist Gilliland, in her first book, approaches this brutal period through the eyes of the Abuelas de Plaza de Mayo, a scrappy, courageous group of mothers of desaparecidos who had infants or were pregnant when they were disappeared. Over decades of instability that followed the junta's rule, the Abuelas were at the forefront of calls for accountability and justice, anchoring their grief in the search for grandchildren who had been born in detention centers and adopted--appropriated--by new families, often with connections to Videla's government. The author conveys the complicated, heart-wrenching fullness of her characters' individual stories and shades their backdrop with compulsively readable history of geopolitical tension and the emerging DNA science that fueled the Abuelas' fight. Gilliland's work, exhaustively and compassionately researched, offers a crucial counterbalance to the dark legacy of Argentina's desaparecidos, injecting the light of a model resistance movement that lay the groundwork for future international human rights investigations. Her humility and respect for the fraught journeys her subjects made toward each other and for the vital questions their journeys raised--about power, identity, family, and collective memory and healing--ensure the text will resonate for generations the world over. A piercing, emotional tribute to the value of persistent resistance. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
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