Following the partitioning of Poland by Germany & the Soviet Union in 1939, Matthew Kelly`s great grandmother & her two daughters were deported to the East. Thus began an extraordinary ordeal that took them, & many thousands like them, on a journey stretching from Siberia to Pakistan, & beyond. Their male relatives endured a parallel journey; arrested, exiled, & held as prisoners of war. Countless numbers were summarily executed by the Red Army. They saw the steppe, they were put to work in labour camps, they built sections of the trans-Siberian railway, they cleared forests, they toiled on collective farms. They knew hunger, exhaustion, disease & death. Persecuted by the Soviet Union, Poland was to become its unexpected ally following the German invasion in 1941. A new Polish army, ` The Anders Army` was assembled in Palestine. For a brief moment, in Kazakhstan, families were reunited, before being evacuated; to India, to Britain, to Mexico & East Africa; & from there, across the world. The experiences of these Poles had consequences far reaching & enduring, both to Pol&, to Polish identity, & to the families that survived; reverberating through generations. These incredible stories remain largely untold. In ” Finding Poland” Matthew Kelly embarks on a journey through his ancestor`s footsteps, travelling through places they lived, & landscapes they survived, to provide an account of these extraordinary people & their unique history. Part memoir, history & travel book, it is also a profound meditation on the experience of displacement & exile, of the impact of such seismic disruption, & the deep legacies such trauma bequeaths.