They Told Me Back Home Would Be Beautiful
They Told Me Back Home Would Be Beautiful
A Palestinian Memoir (Pre-order, Oct 27 2026)
Elena DudumCouldn't load pickup availability
“A deeply felt memoir of race and history that defies social erasures of the diasporic Palestinian experience, They Told Me Back Home Would Be Beautiful boldly explores how politicized identities, especially within the US, are shaped and manipulated by broader agendas.” —The Whiting Award Judges Citation
In the tradition of Safiya Sinclair’s How to Say Babylon and Cathy Park Hong’s Minor Feelings, a stirring and poignant memoir that follows Elena Dudum’s transformational journey as she interrogates her evolving relationship to Palestine.
My father scours the internet for century-old magazines about Palestine. For years, he would talk about these mysterious documents but rarely show them to anyone. “I have proof,” he would say to whoever would listen, “that Palestine exists.”
As a child, Elena Dudum understood Palestine as a place too important for maps—mythical and just out of reach. In her Palestinian Christian household in San Francisco, Ramallah and Jaffa existed first in her father’s voice. She was raised on stories that felt more like warnings, his lectures pushing against the threat of forgetting. But as those lessons began to eclipse everything else, Elena found herself shrinking from an inheritance that felt both sacred and suffocating.
Elena’s first trip to Palestine shattered distance. Checkpoints, razed olive groves, soldiers—it was all plainly in front of her, as were the ghosts of her family’s history. What had once felt mythical now pressed against her body. The visit left her unsettled, gripped by an anxiety she could not name. Back in the United States, her relationships and psyche quietly unraveled as she tried to outrun what she had seen. She buried herself in elite institutions and the rising world of tech, where ambition was rewarded and history was inconvenient. In time, she would have to decide whether success was worth the silence it required.
Eventually, the inheritance she had tried to escape demanded reckoning.
Braiding rich personal narrative with history, archival fragments, and cultural critique, They Told Me Back Home Would Be Beautiful traces one woman’s journey as she returns—slowly, deliberately—to her father’s lessons, determined to claim them on her own terms.
Elena Dudum is a Palestinian Syrian writer whose work explores the boundaries of generational trauma and what it means to have an identity shaped by political narratives. Elena recently graduated from Columbia University with an MFA in nonfiction writing where she also taught freshmen composition. Her personal essays on Palestine have been published in The Atlantic, Time, Bon Appétit, and Cosmopolitan, among others. She was awarded the 2025 Whiting Nonfiction Grant for Works-in-Progress for They Told Me Back Home Would Be Beautiful.
- Publisher: Atria/One Signal Publishers
- Publish Date: October 27, 2026
- Pages: 288
- Language: English
- Type: Hardcover
- EAN/UPC: 9781668204986
- Dimensions: 9 in H | 6 in W | 0.7 in T | 1.1 lb Wt
- BISAC Categories: Biography & Memoir, History
