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Finalist: Until I Find You: Disappeared Children and Coercive Adoptions in Guatemala, by Rachel Nolan (Harvard University Press)

A focused, extensively reported study of how, between 1977 and 2007, Guatemala became the second largest source of foreign adoptions in the world, a breeding ground for racism, greed and exploitation.

Nominated Work

Until I Find You: Disappeared Children and Coercive Adoptions in Guatemala

Until I Find You

The poignant saga of Guatemala’s adoption industry: an international marketplace for children, built on a foundation of inequality, war, and Indigenous dispossession.

In 2009 Dolores Preat went to a small Maya town in Guatemala to find her birth mother. At the address retrieved from her adoption file, she was told that her supposed mother, one Rosario Colop Chim, never gave up a child for adoption—but in 1984 a girl across the street was abducted. At that house, Preat met a woman who strongly resembled her. Colop Chim, it turned out, was not Preat’s mother at all, but a jaladora—a baby broker.

Some 40,000 children, many Indigenous, were kidnapped or otherwise coercively parted from families scarred by Guatemala’s civil war or made desperate by unrelenting poverty. Amid the US-backed army’s genocide against Indigenous Maya, children were wrested from their villages and put up for adoption illegally, mostly in the United States. During the war’s second decade, adoption was privatized, overseen by lawyers who made good money matching children to overseas families. Private adoptions skyrocketed to the point where tiny Guatemala overtook giants like China and Russia as a “sender” state. Drawing on government archives, oral histories, and a rare cache of adoption files opened briefly for war crimes investigations, Rachel Nolan explores the human toll of an international industry that thrives on exploitation.

Would-be parents in rich countries have fostered a commercial market for children from poor countries, with Guatemala becoming the most extreme case. Until I Find You reckons with the hard truths of a practice that builds loving families in the Global North out of economic exploitation, endemic violence, and dislocation in the Global South.

Biography

Rachel Nolan is an author and historian. She is an Assistant Professor at Boston University. Nolan received her doctorate in Latin American and Caribbean History at New York University. She holds a B.A. in History and Literature from Harvard University. Before joining the faculty at Boston University, she held a postdoctoral fellowship at the Columbia Society of Fellows in the Humanities at Columbia University. Prior to becoming a historian, Nolan worked as a journalist. Her writing has appeared in The New Yorker, New York Times, London Review of Books, New York Review of Books, and El Faro, among other publications. Nolan is a Contributing Editor at Harper’s Magazine.
 

Winners

Prize Winner in General Nonfiction in 2025:

Benjamin Nathans

A prodigiously researched and revealing history of Soviet dissent, how it was repeatedly put down and came to life again, populated by a sprawling cast of courageous people dedicated to fighting for threatened freedoms and hard-earned rights. General Nonfiction

Finalists

Nominated as finalists in General Nonfiction in 2025:

Rollo Romig

A captivating account of a crusading South Indian’s murder, a mystery rich in local culture and politics that also connects to such global themes as authoritarianism, fundamentalism and other threats to free expression.

The Jury

Mark Whitaker(Chair)

Writer/Journalist, New York City

Sonali Deraniyagala

Adjunct Professor of International and Public Affairs, Columbia University

James Forman Jr.

J. Skelly Wright Professor of Law, Yale University

David Frum

Staff Writer, The Atlantic

Sarah Schulman

Ralla Klepak Professor of English, Northwestern University

Winners in General Nonfiction

Nathan Thrall

A finely reported and intimate account of life under Israeli occupation of the West Bank, told through a portrait of a Palestinian father whose five-year-old son dies in a fiery school bus crash when Israeli and Palestinian rescue teams are delayed by security regulations.

Robert Samuels and Toluse Olorunnipa

An intimate, riveting portrait of an ordinary man whose fatal encounter with police officers in 2020 sparked an international movement for social change, but whose humanity and complicated personal story were unknown. (Moved by the Board from the Biography category.)

Andrea Elliott

An affecting, deeply reported account of a girl who comes of age during New York City’s homeless crisis–a portrait of resilience amid institutional failure that successfully merges literary narrative with policy analysis.

David Zucchino

A gripping account of the overthrow of the elected government of a Black-majority North Carolina city after Reconstruction that untangles a complicated set of power dynamics cutting across race, class and gender.

2025 Prize Winners

Staff of The Wall Street Journal

For chronicling political and personal shifts of the richest person in the world, Elon Musk, including his turn to conservative politics, his use of legal and illegal drugs and his private conversations with Russian President Vladimir Putin.