
Crossing Lines: The Hidden Lives and Untold Struggles of Undocumented Immigrants in America
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Narrado por:
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Jarrin Sperry
Every day, approximately one thousand people make the desperate decision to leave everything they know and love, embarking on a perilous journey toward the United States. Crossing Lines takes you inside their world—not through statistics or political rhetoric, but through the intimate, unforgettable stories of four individuals whose courage, sacrifice, and determination reveal the true human cost of our immigration crisis.
Elena, a mother from Guatemala, sells her grandmother's house to pay smugglers, then spends six years cleaning wealthy Americans' homes while her children grow up a thousand miles away. Carlos, fleeing gang violence in Honduras, builds a construction business in Atlanta while living in constant fear that discovery could destroy everything he's worked to create. Rosa escapes domestic violence in El Salvador only to face new forms of exploitation in Virginia's underground economy. Carmen brings her young daughter from Guatemala to Phoenix, watching her become American while knowing their family remains forever vulnerable.
Their journeys reveal shocking truths about the hidden networks that transport desperate families across borders, the employers who profit from their vulnerability, the communities that both embrace and exploit them, and the children who grow up American in everything but legal status. From suffocating safe houses to life-threatening desert crossings, from workplace exploitation to the daily terror of living without legal protection, Crossing Lines exposes realities that most Americans never see.
Written by Juan Rodriguez Aceves—whose own family's immigration story spans three generations from the Bracero Program to today's undocumented reality—this book combines the intimacy of personal narrative with the authority of lived experience, as someone who became a U.S. citizen through legal pathways while understanding the circumstances that force others onto illegal ones.
©2025 Juan Rodriguez Aceves (P)2025 Juan Rodriguez Aceves