š Up to 70% Off Selected ItemsShop Sale
Conviction
The story of a young, American womanās misguided journey to join ISIS and the grief of the mother she leaves behindāa 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 Maggieās first instinct was rage. But when her parents took her to an open house at a mosque, she glimpsed a faith of beauty and peaceāand 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. Handsome and headstrong, he is enraged by all the same things she isāso 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 idealism and love, Maggie follows him into territory from which she canāt return. Slowly, she gleans the brutal nature of the group she has joinedāone that does not share her vision of Islam.
Back in Maine, Ann is left with silence and half-truths, with the hope that one day her daughter will realize her mistake and come home. As ISIS explodes into global infamy, Ann becomes consumed by questions of what she did not see in her daughter and how beliefāwhether religious, political, or maternalācan turn to conviction, and conviction to ruin.
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.
Maggie is gone. And her mother, Ann, is reeling.
In the aftermath of 9/11, eleven-year-old Maggieās first instinct was rage. But when her parents took her to an open house at a mosque, she glimpsed a faith of beauty and peaceāand 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. Handsome and headstrong, he is enraged by all the same things she isāso 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 idealism and love, Maggie follows him into territory from which she canāt return. Slowly, she gleans the brutal nature of the group she has joinedāone that does not share her vision of Islam.
Back in Maine, Ann is left with silence and half-truths, with the hope that one day her daughter will realize her mistake and come home. As ISIS explodes into global infamy, Ann becomes consumed by questions of what she did not see in her daughter and how beliefāwhether religious, political, or maternalācan turn to conviction, and conviction to ruin.
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.
Product Information
Product Information
Shipping & Returns
Shipping & Returns
Conviction
Conviction
The story of a young, American womanās misguided journey to join ISIS and the grief of the mother she leaves behindāa 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 Maggieās first instinct was rage. But when her parents took her to an open house at a mosque, she glimpsed a faith of beauty and peaceāand 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. Handsome and headstrong, he is enraged by all the same things she isāso 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 idealism and love, Maggie follows him into territory from which she canāt return. Slowly, she gleans the brutal nature of the group she has joinedāone that does not share her vision of Islam.
Back in Maine, Ann is left with silence and half-truths, with the hope that one day her daughter will realize her mistake and come home. As ISIS explodes into global infamy, Ann becomes consumed by questions of what she did not see in her daughter and how beliefāwhether religious, political, or maternalācan turn to conviction, and conviction to ruin.
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.
Maggie is gone. And her mother, Ann, is reeling.
In the aftermath of 9/11, eleven-year-old Maggieās first instinct was rage. But when her parents took her to an open house at a mosque, she glimpsed a faith of beauty and peaceāand 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. Handsome and headstrong, he is enraged by all the same things she isāso 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 idealism and love, Maggie follows him into territory from which she canāt return. Slowly, she gleans the brutal nature of the group she has joinedāone that does not share her vision of Islam.
Back in Maine, Ann is left with silence and half-truths, with the hope that one day her daughter will realize her mistake and come home. As ISIS explodes into global infamy, Ann becomes consumed by questions of what she did not see in her daughter and how beliefāwhether religious, political, or maternalācan turn to conviction, and conviction to ruin.
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.
$9.45
Original: $26.99
-65%Convictionā
$26.99
$9.45Product Information
Product Information
Shipping & Returns
Shipping & Returns
Description
The story of a young, American womanās misguided journey to join ISIS and the grief of the mother she leaves behindāa 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 Maggieās first instinct was rage. But when her parents took her to an open house at a mosque, she glimpsed a faith of beauty and peaceāand 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. Handsome and headstrong, he is enraged by all the same things she isāso 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 idealism and love, Maggie follows him into territory from which she canāt return. Slowly, she gleans the brutal nature of the group she has joinedāone that does not share her vision of Islam.
Back in Maine, Ann is left with silence and half-truths, with the hope that one day her daughter will realize her mistake and come home. As ISIS explodes into global infamy, Ann becomes consumed by questions of what she did not see in her daughter and how beliefāwhether religious, political, or maternalācan turn to conviction, and conviction to ruin.
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.
Maggie is gone. And her mother, Ann, is reeling.
In the aftermath of 9/11, eleven-year-old Maggieās first instinct was rage. But when her parents took her to an open house at a mosque, she glimpsed a faith of beauty and peaceāand 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. Handsome and headstrong, he is enraged by all the same things she isāso 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 idealism and love, Maggie follows him into territory from which she canāt return. Slowly, she gleans the brutal nature of the group she has joinedāone that does not share her vision of Islam.
Back in Maine, Ann is left with silence and half-truths, with the hope that one day her daughter will realize her mistake and come home. As ISIS explodes into global infamy, Ann becomes consumed by questions of what she did not see in her daughter and how beliefāwhether religious, political, or maternalācan turn to conviction, and conviction to ruin.
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.












