Publishers Weekly stated that the book has "Moments of humor and insight" and that the "voices" of the co-authors "remain oddly similar".[1]
Reception
Susanne Pari, an Iranian American who wrote a review for the San Francisco Chronicle wrote that the " detailed, nuanced, honest, full-bodied memoir" has "an exciting pace" and that it had an "objective" treatment of the subject matter.[2]
Kirkus Reviews concluded that the book is "An unsugared account that demonstrates the admirable, unbreakable bond of friends, parents and countrymen."[3]
Bob Goldfarb of the Jewish Book Council stated that it is "it’s absorbing and hard to put down" and that the book "offers many of the pleasures of an epistolary novel."[4]