49 pages • 1 hour read
Katherine MarshA modern alternative to SparkNotes and CliffsNotes, SuperSummary offers high-quality Study Guides with detailed chapter summaries and analysis of major themes, characters, and more.
Nowhere Boy takes place against the background of the Syrian Civil War. The war began in 2011 after years of growing discontent with the presidency of Bashar al-Assad. Under Bashar al-Assad’s presidency, Syria became a totalitarian state engaged in censorship, ethnic cleansing, and oppression of anyone who did not support the regime. This oppression led to the formation of the Free Syrian Army. In 2014, the Islamic State, an extremist jihadist group, pushed into Syria, with the Syrian army fighting against them. The war, arrests, bombings, and persecution from Bashar al-Assad have forced millions of refugees to flee Syria, causing the largest refugee crisis in history. Many countries in Europe, the Middle East, and North America have granted asylum to these refugees, though not without political difficulties. Economists argue that the integration of refugees leads to more economic opportunities for everyone, but many politicians seek to blame refugees for social problems and use xenophobic sentiment for political gain. Some countries have set up temporary camps meant to give aid and shelter to the refugees. Much like the detention center that Baba lives in at the end of the novel, these refugee camps are meant to house refugees temporarily before they find permanent housing. The Syrian refugee crisis is ongoing, as the war in Syria continues.
Katherine Marsh is an award-winning novelist of middle grade and young adult literature. She has written The Night Tourist, The Lost Year, and Nowhere Boy. Her books deal with the complex issues of immigration, war, and trauma. Two events influenced her decision to become a children’s’ writer: the increasing Islamophobia in the United States after 9/11 and the death of her grandmother, who had been born in Ukraine. Marsh decided to write books warning against the danger of discriminatory thinking, especially for children. Marsh draws on her own experience as an American living in Brussels during the refugee crisis and terror attacks of the late 2010s. The difficulties of navigating unfamiliar cultures and of living in a climate of fear are evident throughout Nowhere Boy, and the house where the Howards live is based on the one inhabited by Marsh and her family. Marsh conducted extensive research on Syrian refugees living in Europe and investigated the story of Albert Jonnart, whose true story is given in the novel.