“A Venezuelan reporter who left her home country in 2010 chronicles the traumatic fate of her family and her broken nation…Throughout, the author vividly portrays the unfolding tragedy shared by all Venezuelans. The collapse of a nation told through the poignant story of one family.” —Kirkus Reviews “The author writes wrenchingly of her mother’s struggles to provide for her and her siblings while their neighborhood deteriorated around them, and catalogs Venezuela’s political troubles with rigor and concision. It’s a fascinating and devastating account of one family’s fate amid a national crisis.” —Publishers Weekly “Terrific Venezuelan journalist Paula Ramon’s Motherland is a joint study of a nation dying under authoritarianism, and a family pulling away, leaving their aging matriarch alone in “a concrete bunker” of a home, a hotbox when the mismanaged electrical grids fail. Rarely are South American upheavals explained with such intimacy.” —Chicago Tribune “Motherland is a deeply personal account of the writer’s experience of this precipitous descent into insecurity, poverty and despair through that of her own, disintegrating family…an important account of where such experiments go wrong and the lived reality of those who occupy the laboratory.” —Latin American Review of Books