Book Descriptions
for The Teacher of Nomad Land by Daniel Nayeri
From Cooperative Children's Book Center (CCBC)
Nayeri’s heartfelt storytelling provides a Middle Eastern perspective on WWII in this moving novel. Set in Iran in 1941, Babak and Sana are orphaned siblings. Iran is a neutral country occupied by the British and the Soviets. The only thing Babak has left to his name is his father’s large chalkboard with carrying straps. Babak is at a loss, but Sana, full of wit and wisdom, sees opportunity. The siblings head for the hills, where they hope to find a position with a nomadic tribe, but they are dismissed by the leader as a liability. Babak is devastated, but Sana stays buoyant until they come across an armed soldier named Vulf in the woods. Terrified, the siblings try to appease him by sharing fire and food. They escape but discover that they are being followed by Ben, a young Jewish boy being hunted by Vulf. Ben is rude and deeply annoys Sana. Patient Babak coaxes Ben to share his traumatic exodus from Europe and vows to reunite him with his lost brother. The trio are soon on a fast-paced escape from Vulf, only to be caught at a military checkpoint by British and Soviet soldiers. With pluck and luck, the trio make it to the train that will take Ben to his brother—and then Vulf reappears for a final showdown. This slender novel offers a memorable sibling adventure story and fills a geographical gap in middle grade World War II novels.
CCBC Choices 2026. © Cooperative Children's Book Center, Univ. of Wisconsin – Madison, 2026. Used with permission.
From the Publisher
Winner of the National Book Award for Young People's Literature
Page-turning WW2 hidden history masterfully told by award winner Daniel Nayeri
1941. The German armies are storming across Europe. Iran is a neutral country occupied by British forces on one side, Soviet forces on another. Soldiers fill the teahouses of Isfahan. Nazi spies roam the alleyways
Babak and his little sister have just lost their father. Now orphans, fearing they will be separated, the two devise a plan. Babak will take up his father's old job as a teacher to the nomads. With a chalkboard strapped to Babak's back, and a satchel full of textbooks, the siblings set off to find the nomad tribes as they make their yearly trek across the mountains.
On the treacherous journey they meet a Jewish boy, hiding from a Nazi spy. And suddenly, they are all in a race for survival.
Against the backdrop of World War II comes an epic adventure in the faraway places. Through the cacophony of soldiers, tanks, and planes, can young hearts of different creeds and nations learn to find a common language?
Master storyteller Daniel Nayeri keeps you on the edge of your seat, uncertain to the very end.
Page-turning WW2 hidden history masterfully told by award winner Daniel Nayeri
1941. The German armies are storming across Europe. Iran is a neutral country occupied by British forces on one side, Soviet forces on another. Soldiers fill the teahouses of Isfahan. Nazi spies roam the alleyways
Babak and his little sister have just lost their father. Now orphans, fearing they will be separated, the two devise a plan. Babak will take up his father's old job as a teacher to the nomads. With a chalkboard strapped to Babak's back, and a satchel full of textbooks, the siblings set off to find the nomad tribes as they make their yearly trek across the mountains.
On the treacherous journey they meet a Jewish boy, hiding from a Nazi spy. And suddenly, they are all in a race for survival.
Against the backdrop of World War II comes an epic adventure in the faraway places. Through the cacophony of soldiers, tanks, and planes, can young hearts of different creeds and nations learn to find a common language?
Master storyteller Daniel Nayeri keeps you on the edge of your seat, uncertain to the very end.
Publisher description retrieved from Google Books.

