About this item
Highlights
- The story of a young, American woman's misguided journey to join ISIS and the grief of the mother she leaves behind--a gripping and thought-provoking exploration of loss, empathy, and hope from the acclaimed author of The Mercy SeatMaggie is gone.
- About the Author: Elizabeth Winthrop's novels include The Mercy Seat, Fireworks, December, and The Why of Things.
- 280 Pages
- Fiction + Literature Genres, Political
Description
Book Synopsis
The story of a young, American woman's misguided journey to join ISIS and the grief of the mother she leaves behind--a gripping and thought-provoking exploration of loss, empathy, and hope from the acclaimed author of The Mercy Seat
Maggie is gone. And her mother, Ann, is reeling.
In the aftermath of 9/11, eleven-year-old Maggie's first instinct was rage. But when her parents took her to an open house at a mosque, she glimpsed a faith of beauty and peace--and over time came to embrace Islam as her own.
A decade later, Maggie has left Maine for the life in New York she always dreamed of. Yet her joy is shadowed by images from Syria: civilians starving, children buried under rubble. She feels powerless to help. Then she meets Ahmet, the handsome and headstrong son of a neighborhood baker. Ahmet is enraged by all the same things she is--so much that he leaves his life behind to join a new rebel group emerging in Syria, electrified by its sweeping vision to fight Assad and create a Muslim utopia. The group is ISIS.
Driven by love, Maggie follows him into territory from which she can't return. Trapped without her passport and cut off from home, she slowly gleans the brutal nature of the group she has joined, one that does not share her vision of Islam.
Told in counterpoint between mother and daughter, America and Syria, Conviction is both intimate and global in scope: a portrait of love during war, and a nuanced dive into the horrors of the modern world and the conditions that beget violence.
Review Quotes
Praise for The Mercy Seat
"It takes a brave writer to compose a novel about the execution of an African-American man in the Deep South when the topic has previously been brought to life by authors like Harper Lee and Ernest Gaines. There are multiple possibilities for failure: preachiness, melodrama and bias, to name a few. But Elizabeth H. Winthrop avoids these hazards by writing well, demonstrating once again that while the subject matter is the body of the narrative, the prose itself is the soul and the thing that makes a topic new."--Tim Gautreaux, The New York Times
"Beautifully crafted."--BBC.com
"This potent novel about prejudice and the constraints of challenging the status quo will move and captivate readers."--Publishers Weekly (starred review)
"A remarkable work with a stunning unexpected conclusion, not to be missed."--Library Journal (starred review)
About the Author
Elizabeth Winthrop's novels include The Mercy Seat, Fireworks, December, and The Why of Things. She was the recipient of the Schaeffer Writing Fellowship at the University of California at Irvine where she earned her MFA. She lives with her husband and daughter in Massachusetts, where she is Assistant Professor of English/Creative Writing at Endicott College.