The Fleeing
Season
An American Mother's Migration Toward Safety and Justice
What does it mean to flee a country you love — not in desperation, but in conscience?
A memoir of motherhood, migration, and the price of safety. One woman's deeply personal reckoning with the promise — and failure — of the American Dream.
A Book Whose Moment Has Finally Arrived
In its 250th year, America is grappling with a question it has never had to ask: What happens when its own citizens choose to leave?
For years, migration stories moved in one direction — toward America. Now, a quiet but seismic reversal is underway. Beneath the headlines about deportations and border crackdowns lies a less-reported exodus: American citizens, many of them middle-class families, are packing up and starting over abroad. Not fleeing poverty. Fleeing fear.
America's own citizens are leaving in record numbers, replanting themselves and their families in lands they find more affordable and safe.
The Wall Street Journal, February 25, 2026
The Fleeing Season is not a political polemic. It is the intimate, honest, and sometimes uncomfortable account of one American mother who made this choice before it had a name — and has been living its consequences ever since. She saw the wave coming. This memoir is the record of why she moved to higher ground.
A Story That Subverts Every Migration Narrative You Know
Migration is most often told as a story of deprivation — people fleeing poverty, violence, or collapse. This memoir tells a different, more unsettling story: what it means to leave when you have every advantage, and still find that not enough.
Anchored by a fierce commitment to reproductive justice — the right not only to have or not have children, but to raise them in safety and health — the author found the promise of the American Dream hollow. When the chance to leave came, she took it.
Now living in the U.K., she does not offer easy answers. Through personal narrative and critical reflection, she interrogates her new home with the same unflinching eye — sometimes arriving at unexpected and uncomfortable conclusions. Britain is not a utopia. But the questions she carries across the Atlantic are universal.
- What does it mean to raise children in safety and freedom — and at what cost?
- Is a new home immune to the forces that drove you from the old one?
- How do our deepest convictions about justice shape the geography of our lives?
- What do we owe the place we leave — and the place that takes us in?
- When does leaving become an act of conscience rather than escape?
The Intimate and the Political, Woven Together
The right to raise children in safe, healthy environments is not abstract — it is the force that moves families across oceans and borders.
What does it mean to flee with advantages most migrants never have? This memoir refuses to look away from that tension.
The new home is examined without sentimentality. The author's critical lens does not soften when she turns it on the country that welcomed her.
The American exodus has a name. Now it has a face.
Be the first to know when The Fleeing Season is available — publication news, readings, and updates from the author.