HANSON – Author visits to the Hanson Public Library at 9 a.m. on a Saturday are unusual, to say the least.
As a regular morning Saturday Stories group sang “The Itsy Bitsy Spider” and “The Wheels on the Bus,” in the Children’s Room on the other side of the wall, Duxbury teen Julianna Lee was reading a poignant passage from her debut novella, “we never slept after that,” about survival among political and religious violence and upheaval.
If the time and atmosphere were different, so is the author.
The early hour was because Lee, a senior at Duxbury High School, had to travel to New Haven, Conn., in the afternoon for a scholarship reception where she’ll be studying international politics and Albanian at Yale University in the fall.
More than a dozen Hanson residents listened to her speak about how she came to write her self-published book, answer questions and read selected passages before offering to sign purchased copies of the book. The audience included friends and neighbors of Lee’s grandparents, who reside at Stonebridge Commons in Hanson.
They all learned that the fractured history of post-WWII Albania and war-torn Kosovo of the 1990s have some resonance for America, and so many other areas of the world in 2025.
Lee’s book, liker her, was born in Massachusetts – part of an Albanian-American community and church. In a history class interview project in 2022, her sophomore year, she got to know the real-life stories that serve as the nucleus of her novel of two young men fleeing their homes to find new lives in America.
Dimitri is a Muslim Albanian raised in what became the Serian-controlled territory of Kosovo during the ethnic cleansing as the former Yugoslavia was shattered. Gjon is a Chrisian Albanian living under the repressive government had betrayed had the people’s hopes that communism would bring the freedom for which they long hoped.
“The narrative history is the most important thing in this book,” she said in her talk. “Just being able to recognize, even though they’re such different people in different stories in different time periods, and religions, that what they’ve gone through is surprisingly very similar.”
She fictionalized the work because most of the people she had interviewed for her class project had wanted to remain anonymous, for obvious reasons. Her use of parallel story lines, she said, is a more powerful way to see that they share more in common that even they might think.
The book, however, was a personal journey that stemmed from the AP World History interview project, and credited her teacher, Jesse Dennis, with running a classroom focused on discussion and conversation that sparked ideas and curiosity in her mind to do outside research.
Her additional research took her back to the days of Ottoman Empire Albania, and understanding how one empire can overtake another country and what it looks like for people to have to convert to a different religion, as they struggle to understand where do their existing beliefs fit into a new reality.
“Who are you when you’re controlled by a different government that doesn’t represent your people? These questions made me think not just of my family, but of the entire Albanian population, as much as governments around the world,” she said. “It’s definitely very specific to the Balkan area, just because there are so many smaller nations and different religious groups –you’ll find a Muslim nation next to a Christian nation – and because the history of that area is so disputed, there’s great disagreement over who owns the land and has claim over it. It’s something that’s exasperated the Balkans, but is something that’s common across the world, as well.”
To find her interview subjects, she started local and expanded on an interest her family had kindled..
“I think, overall it was the not knowing and uncertainty of my own family history, as well as this history that has such rich stories and ideas … and needs more recognition that it has a story applicable to governments around the world,” she said.
Family, parishioners at the Albanian Eastern Orthodox Church she visited in Boston, taking a trip to Albania to hear more recent accounts as well as the stories of people who have passed provided a wealth of information.
Among the most powerful stories Lee had heard was from a Muslim Kosovar who works at an optometry shop where she has her glasses tightened.
“I had originally set out to interview an X-amount of Christian Albanians and the same amount of Muslim Albanians and have it spread out over a time period,” she said. “But, when I interviewed this man – I’ll keep his name anonymous – I think that it would be almost too many stories to interview a bunch more because he was sharing other people’s stories, as well.”
He had been forced to leave his home when the Serbs invaded Kosovo, he had to flee and ended up in a refugee camp in northern Macedonia, among others, before he was finally able to relocate to the United States. His story of his escape on the day Serbians came to his village, and separated the men from the women and girls before beating them provided the title for the book.
Some wrapped up in these conflicts are faced as Dimitri must, with the decision of whether to flee and leave other family members behind. That family connection, as well as personal safety and agency all enter into a person’s decision to flee and seek refuge in another country, she said.
Available through Amazon Kindle Direct Publishing, she found that process allowed a quick turnaround for her book to get published, but a career in writing is not definite at this point, she said.
“I always wanted to be [a writer] when I was younger, but I think, now, I’m so interested in the idea of international politics and relations, I think maybe going that route, and using writing as a way to support that,” she said. “In the foreign services, you are writing a lot and that’s a major part of your job. … I think that’s what I want to do.”
Lee said she wants to improve her command of the Albanian language – something offered at some New England universities – with Harvard and Yale offering budding Albanian programs. Yale, where Lee will be studying also offers a major in Slavic, Baltic and Albanian languages. At Harvard, it is part of the languages curriculum.
She is also keeping a sober eye on the effects of current politics on the place she hopes to work one day – the United States Department of State.
“It’s important to maintain civil relationships with other countries and to have good diplomatic relationships with these other states,” she said. “I am concerned with the future of the State Department, but hopeful that future politicians and generations that will be running the State Department in the future, will recognize the need to support the State Department and diplomacy abroad.”
That said, she noted that – as with the military — chain of command is important.
One member of the audience lauded Lee’s work as not many of the world’s genocides are known about.
“Being able to allow complex histories and contrasting viewpoints as a way of bring communities together and spark conversations to uplift society, rather than be the driving force for division, is something that we all need to take away in our country and other countries everywhere,” Lee said. “Political polarization is something that people talk about a lot, but just the idea of allowing differences to start conversations that bring people together instead of dividing them is something that I really wanted to get across in the book.”
Just because it’s history, she said, doesn’t mean it’s in the past.