"This is an astounding account of human endurance and faith against overwhelming odds and terrible injustice." -- Publishers Weekly
"With the Trump administration signing an executive order to keep the prison open indefinitely in 2018, it is more important than ever to read stories like Guantanamo Kid" -- Amnesty International UK
"Mohammed El-Gharani knows all about the horrors of Guantanamo, as a child subjected to torture by the US authorities and held in the prison for eight years. And yet far too many people still don't know about Guantanamo's long and abusive history, and one main reason is that no footage or photos of any of the torture and abuse has ever surfaced. Overcoming this critical lack of images, Jerome Tubiana, a journalist who spent time with Mohammed after his release in 2010, hearing his story, has worked with the talented comic artist Alexandre Franc to bring his ordeal to life in a graphic novel that deserves to be read as widely as possible, as, in page after page of harrowing memories, Mohammed tells his story with wit, endurance and unbreakable spirit." -- Andy Worthington (campaigner, journalist and author of The Guantanamo Files)
"Mohammed El-Gharani was just 14 when he was kidnapped and rendered to Guantanamo Bay, the location of some of the worst human rights abuses of our age. There, he was detained without charge or trial, facing brutal torture, isolation and mistreatment. The US accused him of having been an Al-Qaeda mastermind at the tender age of 6 in a country he had never visited, and his story exposes the cruel absurdity of the US' Guantanamo project and the faulty 'intelligence' it was built on. Yet, despite all this, his is a story of survival in even the darkest of times. Guantanamo Kid is a book everyone should read - an innovative, visually stunning way of telling an important story. And a powerful way to remind us that the Guantanamo story is one that is still being played out to this day as 40 men continue to languish in the prison, watching the months and years pass by with no access to justice and very little hope for freedom." -- Clive Stafford Smith, founder of Reprieve and Mohammed El-Gharani's lawyer