The Great Good Summer

The Great Good Summerby Liz Garton Scanlon

Kids think about things. They think about God and religion and wonder and the world.  And when things are difficult, they question their faith, regardless of what it is that they have faith in: their parents, their hopes and dreams, their own place in the world and yes, sometimes their religion.  The lives of children are one continual effort to make sense of the world.  It is a rare and special thing to see this reflected on the pages of a book.  These days so many authors sell their readers short, but Scanlon does not.  She does not condescend, she does not oversimplify, she does not skirt the tough stuff.  She gives kids credit for being thinkers and dreamers, hopers and wishers, complex inquisitive people and I applaud her for it.

With that intro, you might expect something serious, dull and plodding, but The Great Good Summer is none of these things. It’s a story of friendship, determination and a road trip meant to reclaim a bit of hope.  Ivy has been raised as an upstanding member of the Baptist Church.  Her Mama and Daddy have always been there for her.  But this summer, after a rash of wildfires, her mama was just not herself.  And one day she just up and took off with a preacher called Hallelujah Dave of the Great Good Bible Church of Panhandle Florida.  Ivy and her Daddy have to muddle along without her.  But like most kids, Ivy wants more of an explanation than she’s been given.  And she wants her mama back.  During the summer, she meets Paul, a science club kid at the park where he and his friends fly model planes. Unlike Ivy, Paul doesn’t believe in God. His faith is in science and the stars, the sense that there is something bigger than our small world: the universe.

The Great Good Summer manages to talk about serious issues without being heavy or serious itself. It does not attempt to declare either Ivy or Paul as morally right.  Rather it gently shows the ways such different beliefs can still have common ground.  This is a very special book and I recommend it wholeheartedly.

Age Recommendation: Grades 4+.  Although this book tackles some difficult questions, it’s done in a way that will be accessible even to middle grades readers.  The friendship between Ivy and Paul is just that, a friendship and does not progress to anything that would make it better suited to older readers.

Religion – Ivy says that kids pray in her school even though the kids in the science club object. Her mother has headed off to the Great Good Bible Church to find God. There is a lot of religion in this book. Ivy goes to church and she thinks a lot about what she has been taught about God. A sermon seems to be directed at her personally. Ivy reflects on the different types of preachers there are. She talks with someone who doesn’t believe in heaven and hell. There are a lot of talks about whether God or science makes more sense. Ivy can’t reconcile what she’s been taught about God and what has happened with her mother.

Sex, Nudity, Dating – Someone gets a bikini wax. A girl had a crush on a boy. A boy is nice to look at. A woman has left her family for another man. A boy is cute.
Profanity –”dang”, “hell” in a religious/geographic sense, “darn”, “lordamercy”, “crappy”, “dummy”, “Oh God,” “sucks”, “Gosh darn it”,
Death, Violence and Gore – Jesus’s bleeding out of his hands and feet is mentioned.
Drugs, Alcohol and Smoking – A man smokes and asks Ivy for a cigarette.
Frightening or Intense Things – Fires burn down houses and forests. There’s a reference to a girl being possessed in a movie. Mama is sick for awhile. People speak in tongues. Her grandfather disowned her mother for marrying and having a baby while young. A woman hasn’t picked up her medicine, which means her health might be in danger. A man is in jail.  There are creepy men in a bus station. Someone is robbed.  A person is in the hospital.

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Summer Reading

This month, I mean that quite literally!  Everything I’m reading and reviewing is actually set during summer. Whether you’re in a part of the country with a solid month of summer vacation left or a paltry week or two, what better way to wring out those last drops of summer?  So grab a cold drink or a frozen treat and a good book and head off to your favorite reading spot.

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Terrific Trilogies!

For Primary Grades

Ruth Stiles Gannett’s My Father’s Dragon trilogy is a gentle fantasy series ideal for younger readers.  It makes a great family read aloud as well,  younger siblings can be included without worries about the content.  With a runaway boy who must rescue a dragon, there’s a lot here to charm children and parents alike.

Full reviews: My Father’s Dragon,  Elmer and the Dragon, The Dragons of Blueland

For Middle Grades

I am always surprised at how little I hear about this series because I really thought it was excellent.  Ideal for strong readers in grades 4 and up, they are packed with adventure, magic, twists and turns and end with an incredibly satisfying conclusion.  They are exactly what a trilogy should be.  Definitely read the full reviews:

Museum of Thieves, City of Lies, Path of Beasts

Tweens

Gwen has always known her family was unusual. In fact, they are time travelers.  But Gwen never expected that she would be the one who would travel through time.  Or that she would end up on a wild adventure to protect the family. Or that this quest would involve an incredibly handsome boy.  Full of excitement with a dash of romance, this trilogy will have readers tearing through, wanting to know what happens next.

Full Reviews (with content): Ruby Red, Sapphire Blue, Emerald Green

Teens

The Starcrossed trilogy is deeply steeped in Greek mythology. Forbidden love, epic battles, godlike powers, it has everything.  The first book was so riveting I was dying to get my hands on the next.  It’s perfect reading for summer when you actually might have the time to sit down and read the set straight through.  These are best for older teens and of course, adults that love YA.  Definitely check out the full content reviews before grabbing them.

Reviews: Starcrossed, Dreamless, Goddess

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Refocus, Renew, READER’S CHOICE!

This July is filled with milestones for me.  My little one turns two, my husband turns 40 and my marriage turns 10.  All of those things deserve more focus and attention than I would be able to give if I were still reading and reviewing full time.  So I’m taking a little summer vacation and will be back in August with some great summer reads for you – books set during summer so that you can properly soak up every last drop of it before fall.

No new books does not mean no new content.  I’ll still be sharing my thoughts throughout this month, both here and on Twitter.  I have some definite ideas about the direction I want to be heading in the future and I want to tell you all about it.  I’ll also be compiling some handy lists and doing some general blog-keeping.

But I want to hear from you, too! Those of you who follow my blog know that I review books on a specific theme or genre each month.  So tell me what you are interested in seeing reviewed?

  • A specific theme or genre that you’ve been waiting for?
  • Newbery winners? Other award winners?  A selection of years or just the current ones?
  • Any other books recommended by a specific library, book review or similar resource (include a link if you’d like to have me run down a specific list!)
  • Doubtless, WE NEED DIVERSE BOOKS! Have a specific type of diverse book you’re longing for?
  • A specific book or series?
  • A favorite author?
  • Childhood favorites or classics you’ve been waiting to share with your own children?  Ramona? Anne of Green Gables? Wrinkle in Time?  Hardy Boys?
  • More teacher commentary?  Advanced chapter books for 3-4 graders? Below level books with sufficient interest for middle grades readers?

Or anything else your heart desires.  Just let me know.  I can’t promise that I will be able to meet all requests, but I really value your input, so let me know!

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If You Could Be Mine

If You Could Be Mine: A Novel by Sara Farizan

If you love to read about passion and desperation and forbidden love, this will surely satisfy.  If you are into Romeo and Juliet, grab this for sure.  It’s not a retelling by any means, but you get that same irresistible pull between lovers, that same willingness to risk everything to be together.

I could have read this all in one sitting had it not been for pesky basic obligations like feeding my child.  It is very compelling, you’ll want to race through the pages to find out what happens.  Sometimes Sahar can be infuriating. You are really able to see how her emotions are controlling her and sometimes you want to just shake her.  But she does grow up throughout the course of the book and I found the ending very satisfying.

Sahar has been in love with her best friend Nasrin for as long as she can remember.  But in Iran, love between people of the same sex is forbidden.  They are managing to survive on stolen moments until Nasrin’s parents find her a husband.  With her beloved engaged, Sahar is filled with panic and is willing to do anything so that they can be together, even consider sex reassignment surgery.

Age Recommendation: While the actual sexual activity is pretty tame, the sexual topics discussed, ranging from prostitution to sex reassignment surgery are fairly mature.  I would recommend this for Grades 9+
Racism – I’m not really sure about the sentence: Women make noises “like Indians in cowboy movies.”
Sex, Nudity, Dating – Girls buy bras and get their periods.  Girls kiss on the mouth.  A girl will likely have an arranged marriage. A boy has boyfriends.  Sahar thinks of a man as a pedophile even though he technically is not (he is in his thirties marrying an 18 yr old). Sahar talks about her breast size and needing a breast reduction.  A girl appreciates that men can’t stand next to women on the bus, so that no one’s penis brushes her bum. There are multiple transgender characters.  There are lots of prostitutes and some people who are responsible for setting up the prostitutes jobs.  Someone comments that bathrooms can be sexy.  There’s talk of sexual reassignment surgery.  There is kissing and earlobe biting. People are “hot” for each other.
Profanity – “asshole”, “whore”, “damn”, “son of a bitch”, “pervert”,
Death, Violence and Gore – Two boys are hung, supposedly for raping another boy, but likely for sodomy. A girl’s mother has passed away.   In a joking way it is suggested that the inventor of high heels be maimed with shears. Adultery is punishable by stoning to death. Sahar wishes she could smash someone’s teeth in with a crowbar.  A woman slaps someone.  People are sometimes forced to have gender reassignment surgery as a way to correct their sexual orientation.  Someone has attempted suicide.  A man has been beaten.  His lip is bleeding and his eye is swollen.  He has been punched, kicked and whipped. Cousins fight physically, with punches and hair pulling.
Drugs, Alcohol and Smoking – A man smokes.  People drink alcohol.  Sahar’s mother used to smoke.  People are smoking and not just cigarettes. People smoke opium.  It’s probably one of the characters is a drug dealer. Someone is a heroin addict.  Some takes anti-depressants that belong to someone else.  People are drunk.
Frightening or Intense Things – A man had been suicidal. A woman is confronted by police for immodest dress. The police are armed with batons and guns and aren’t afraid to appear threatening.

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The Garden of My Imaan

Garden of My Imaan by Farhana Zia

Author Bio:  Farhana Zia grew up in India.

Friends, boys, religious identity, The Garden of My Imaan is just the thing for middle-school readers who are figuring out who they are and how they fit in.

Like many tweens, Aliya just wants to fit it.  She doesn’t know how the girls in her religion class can be so calm and certain about wearing a hijab.  Such a visible sign of your religion would make you a target for sure.

When a new girl, Marwa shows up at Aliya’s school wearing a hijab, Aliya doesn’t quite know what to do.  The principal wants them to be friends, but Aliya doesn’t get it. Why should she have to be friends with Marwa just because she’s Muslim too?  Being associated with Marwa would just make her seem more different.  Will she ever get comfortable with her own identity?

The more I read, the more it becomes clear that I just don’t have patience with the whining exhibited by many fictional preteens and Aliya is no exception.  Luckily for me, Aliya’s mother has little patience for it either.  With a family that challenges, encourages and supports her and friends that show her how to be more comfortable being herself, Aliya grows up a lot over the course of the book.

Age Recommendation: This will resonate most with students in Grades 4-8.

On Friendship: Aliya has lots of good friends, but like most kids, she also experiences being left out, being teased and being bullied.  While some of these issues resolve in a satisfying way, it’s also the case that some of them end up a bit cliche like the boy who’s a terrible bully but really might just have learning issues and need a friend.  I’ve been loving the recent spate of books that tell it like it is and don’t end with everyone all chummy, so this was a bit of a disappointment in that regard.

On Religion: This was an interesting perspective on being Muslim.  Aliya’s family is not as observant as some and she and her family discuss their religious choices and what would happen if Aliya decided she wanted to wear the hijab.  Although many of Aliya’s friends have chosen to fast for Ramadan, Aliya is still just trying.  She takes days off and manages to fast on other days.  Her parents are very supportive and encouraging, however her religion teacher is displeased with her.  Aliya’s level of observance and the disconnect between what she’s told by her teacher and what her parents approve is something I think a lot of Christians (maybe Catholics in particular) experience, so I think it’s something that will speak to lots of readers.

Accents: I’m always unsure when characters have accents and improper grammar (feel free to share your feelings in the comments section).  It’s a fine line between showing how people talk and well, being racist.  In this book, many characters are shown as not speaking in “proper English”.  A woman who is from Morocco speaks with an accent.  Aliya’s Indian grandmothers do as well.  Sister Khan, the religion teacher also does. Choti Dahdi also speaks with an accent and mispronounces words.

Racism – The characters in this book face a lot of racism, whether it be subtle or overt and aggressive. But sometimes the characters themselves are racist. Here’s an accounting. Aliya’s mother is told to go back to the desert and drive a camel by another driver. Her great grandmother tells a girl that “Chinese people are suppose be very smart with numbers”.  The girl replies that she’s half-Korean not Chinese.  The great-grandmother says “Chinese, Korean, same thing”.  A girl in Aliya’s class insists that Aliya must not celebrate Thanksgiving and if she does, she probably ruins the turkey with smelly spices.  This girl also says that a girl wearing a hijab is wearing “funny headgear”. Graffiti in the girls’ bathroom says that the school should ban headscarves and stinky cheese and that Marwa should go home.  A girl has her hijab ripped off and stepped on.  A boy tells a girl she’s probably an illegal alien.  A boy tells Marwa to go home to Iran or Iraq with the rest of the terrorists.  Someone calls a hijabi a “talking tent”.  Yet another girl has her hijab pulled off.  Both the security service at the mall and the police blow her off and refuse to take the assault seriously.  There’s talk about whether wearing a hijab is risking attack, especially since 9/11.

Sex, Nudity, Dating – A girl has a boyfriend. Girls talk about getting their period.  Aliya asked her mother if she could wear a bra.  Girls have crushes on boys.  A girl’s boyfriend was spotted making out with another girl.  A girl imagines a boy kissing her on the lips.  Another girl kisses a boy.
Profanity – “moron”, “jerk”, “idiot”, “darn”, “stupid”,
Death, Violence and Gore – A girl says she would have liked to punch someone.  A girl shoves a boy who has been verbally bullying her.
Drugs, Alcohol and Smoking – None.
Frightening or Intense Things – Child slavery is mentioned very briefly.  A boy repeatedly threatens a girl telling her he’ll get her and that she’s dead meat.

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A Little Piece of Ground

A Little Piece of Ground by Elizabeth Laird

I can’t remember the last time I read something that offered me such a different perspective than the one I am used to hearing about.  I don’t know this is something typical of most people in the United States due to media coverage, or whether it’s more personal because I know more Jews than Muslims, but the plight of the Palestinians has never really been something I knew very much about.  You hear the news reports of bombings, the words West Bank and Gaza Strip, but I personally was ignorant about what life was like for Palestinians and I expect many readers in the target age group are as well.

Karim and his family live in Ramallah, a city which is frequently subjected to tight curfew.  The book opens with all of the families completely trapped within their homes while Israel tanks patrol nearby. When everyone is finally given an hour outside, people rush to buy food and medicine for loved ones.  School is rarely in session; students pick up work to complete at home, at first due to the restrictions about leaving their homes and later because their school has been destroyed. Karim longs for some normalcy, hanging out with his friends, playing soccer, things that many kids are liable to take for granted.  One day he meets a classmate on the outskirts of town by the refugee camps and they begin clearing rubble to make a place of their own.  But their days of freedom are short-lived as tanks roll back in imposing another curfew.  Karim does not make it back home in time and must hide, waiting and hoping he will be able to safely make his way back home.

For a book that deals with children leading an almost unthinkable life, A Little Piece of Ground manages to convey the gravity of the situation without resorting to graphic violence or sensationalism.  Laird shows the psychological effects that living in an occupied zone has on both children and adults.  The only thing that was very difficult for me were the parts where Karim rejoices in Israeli deaths, talks about how suicide bombers are martyrs and where people shout Death to Israel.  These are hard things because this is how the news often depicts Palestinians, fervent, violent, jubilant at the deaths of their enemies.  But I think Laird manages to show why Karim and his brother might feel this way. I also think it’s important for kids to consider why during violent and longstanding conflicts like this people sometimes find themselves unable to just wish for peace.

Age Recommendation: I don’t think the text was terrible difficult and the violence, as I said before was manageable.  But I think the deeper issues at play here, from the psychological effects of living in a war zone to the long standing nature of the conflict between Israel and Palestine make the book more complicated.  As I mentioned, I am an adult and I had little background knowledge.  I know many children will find themselves at an even greater disadvantage.  I would therefore recommend this for Grades 6+ with the caveat that some younger readers with strong comprehension skills and an interest in the subject matter may be able to read it at a younger age.

Sex, Nudity, Dating – Karim’s brother wants a picture of a girl.
Profanity – “damned”, “moron”, “hell”,
Death, Violence and Gore – A boy hopes that if he is shot he will not be shot in the head and spine and will be able to recover.  A tank is visible outside their bedroom window. Palestinian gunmen shot two Israelis. Much violence is relayed via news reports: Five Palestinians including two children are killed. A refugee camp is shelled killing nine including a three-year old. Five people died and three children were injured when a gunman opened fire on an empty street.  In a village settlers kill three and wound one.  Soldiers are heavily armed.  People throw rocks, stones at others and at tanks.  Petrol bombs are thrown at cars. People are shot at.  People who lay in the road to prevent having their land stolen are run over by tanks.  A boy is killed.  A boy loses an eye.  A suicide bomber in Jerusalem kills 11, four of whom were middle school students.  There’s talk of people losing limbs in the bombings. People are killed by tank shells, houses are destroyed by bulldozers.  A man is killed in an accident. His family never is told the full details.  A man remembers when his family was forced from their home and many were shot.  A teacher hits a student, then grabs his hair and yanks his head back. A student has previously been beaten by teachers.  Students listen to bombings from their classroom.  Tank shells blast homes.  Five are injured.  Three more killed, including an eight year old boy.  An elderly woman is crushed to death when tanks demolish houses.  A soldier is wounded. Boys shout “Death to Israel”.  A boy cuts his head on an air conditioner.  A boy twists his ankle.  A boy is shot in the leg, another in the arm. A kitten is killed by a tank.  A boy was tortured in prison.  It is described, but not in too graphic a way.  They just say he was forced to breathe filth with a bag over his head and that his arms and legs were bound.
Drugs, Alcohol and Smoking – None.
Frightening or Intense Things – There are a large number of people living in refugee camps.  They are looked down on by people who live in the town.  Roadblocks are set up all over.  Men are forced out of cars and made to strip to their underwear.  Land is stolen from its owners.  There are fears of reprisals after every strike against Israel.  People are in danger during curfew simply from running out of medicine. Karim reacts with joy when Israelis are killed.  This is a complicated thing.  He believes the bomber to be a hero, a martyr. (This is on page 53 of the text should you wish to review it). Boys are stranded on a rooftop as soldiers search for a bomber.  They are afraid of being spotted by a helicopter or by heat seeking technology.  Every time Karim is late getting home his mother fears he is dead or injured. A boy fights back against soldiers who are questioning his identity and gets arrested and taken to prison.  A boy freezes and whimpers when he hears bombs or shooting.  Other kids know it has something to do with what happened to his father, but they don’t know what. A boy fears that those in prison will die. Many people are arrested. A girl repeatedly wets the bed in fear. A man struggles with depression.  A boy is caught out during curfew and must hide lest the soldiers find him.

 

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Bestest. Ramadan. Ever

Bestest. Ramadan. Ever. by Medeia Sharif

Author Bio:  Medeia Sharif is a Kurdish-American author.

This was not on any of the lists I consulted, but I couldn’t resist a YA book with Ramadan in title since it is starting imminently.

Almira is attempting to fast for Ramadan for the second time. Last year she experienced a spectacular failure on the very first day when crumbs stuck in her lip gloss revealed her cheating ways to her family.  She’s hoping this year will be better.  She wants to be successful in her faster, capture the heart of the adorable boy she’s fallen for, get her driver’s license and hey, if she loses weight while doing it, all the better!

This is extremely fluffy reading, of a type that I did not find particularly satisfying. And  I am saying that as someone who finds many teen romances satisfying and engaging.  I have no bias against love triangles because certainly that happens among teens.  But it just felt like there wasn’t much substance here, unlike Does My Head Look Big in This which balances the shallow with lots of discussion of other issues.  It’s hard because with such a narrow range of options featuring Muslim main characters I really wanted every thing I read to be excellent.

One of the things that didn’t sit right with me was the way Almira’s weight was written about.  I just don’t feel comfortable with the repeated message that size 8 is too fat. No, wait, hold on.  I don’t feel comfortable repeatedly telling teens that anything is “too fat”. Almira constantly compares herself to her super slim workout obsessed mother.  I know that many teenage girls struggle with their self-image, particularly as it pertains to weight, but in Bestest. Ramadan. Ever. Almira ends up losing weight on the way to her happy ending, supposedly due to her fasting.  It’s presented in a really unrealistic and slightly dangerous way with her parents complimenting her on her weight loss when she’s lost just two pounds, an amount that would really not be visually noticeable at all.  She further comments that for each three pounds she loses, three more boys pay attention to her.  The message here is resoundingly clear, Almira’s weight loss is not just key to her Ramadan being the happiest ever, but it makes the romance seem as though it is somehow tied to her being thinner (it actually isn’t, but it’s hard to separate that when weight loss = happy ending).  Furthermore, many reviewers have mentioned that losing a significant amount of weight like that during Ramadan is incredibly unrealistic because of the feasting that occurs after sundown.

Other concerns: Almira displays a mocking attitude towards her grandmother’s choice to wear the hijab.  Lots of kids find family embarrassing or old fashioned, but in our current political climate, the last thing teens need is to think it is okay to mock women for making that choice.  I also did not like the portrayal of Almira’s grandfather.  He is meant to be quite old-fashioned and he certainly has many character traits that show this. But Sharif doesn’t allow his strict attitudes and frequent criticisms to speak for themselves.  Instead she tells us that he shouts “infidel” a lot and that supposedly he might stone Almira’s mother for her risque dressing habits.  To me, this reads as racist stereotyping, perpetuating narrow minded beliefs about how Muslims speak and act.

Age Recommendation: Ages 12+. There’s not much inappropriate here, but the dismissive way Almira’s friends treat her fasting, coupled with the character of her grandfather make this a book I would not readily recommend.

Sex, Nudity, Dating – She talks about how men lust for her hot mother. She writes love letters to movie stars (that she doesn’t send) and thinks about having a boyfriend.  She and her best friend both find a boy hot.  She didn’t find him as attractive last year when he was on the heavier side and had more pimples. She even thinks her teacher is hot, for an old guy.  Guys at school stare at her mom because she is so attractive.  She is not supposed to date, her family says they will arrange a marriage for her.  She keeps a lot of pictures of hot guys on her computer.  She once had a messaging exchange with a guy who was supposedly a buff 18 yr old soccer player but turned out to be a 30 year old.   She calls him a “Pedo”.  Almira wonders how she’ll get her first kiss.  Her grandfather calls girls who wear short dresses “prostitutes”, as in, actually shouts this out the windows at them.  They watch Dr. 90210 and see a woman who had a “boob job”.   Almira thinks “slut” while looking at a girl in a low-cut shirt. She says her mother sounds like a cat in heat when she sings. Almira has gone through her friends’ parents’ medicine chests and found birth control. (Just being nosy, not stealing it or anything). Almira wonders what a boy would look like shirtless.  She reads romances. Her mother wears revealing clothes.  She daydreams about kisses.  A friend of hers has a guy massage her upper thigh.  People kiss.  People date.
Profanity – “pissing…off”, Almira’s grandmother drops “F bombs”.  People stick up their middle fingers. “suck”, “chonga“, “damn”, “ass”, “hell”, another reference is made to “F bombs”,
Death, Violence and Gore – They dissect frogs for class and talk about how the frogs may have been killed.  There’s some talk about the war and bombings that occur in the Middle East.  Almira’s mother left Iran before the Iranian Revolution and the Iran-Iraq war.  One girl shoves another and they square off to fight. They are stopped by adults.  A girl pinches another girl.  Almira has her wisdom teeth out.  There’s a reference to a story where King Solomon tells two mothers fighting over a child that he will cut the child in half.  Girls are stoned in her parents home countries for dating.
Drugs, Alcohol and Smoking – None.
Frightening or Intense Things – None.

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Written in the Stars

Written in the Stars by Aisha Saeed

Author bio: Aisha Saeed is Pakistani-American

Naila’s parents have always made it clear that they planned on arranging a marriage for her. But Naila’s heart has other plans. She’s fallen for Saif and hopes that one day, she will be able to make her own decisions about who she will marry.

But before she has the opportunity to slowly convince them to come around to her way of thinking, she is caught in a lie and her parents are devastated. Not knowing how to account for Naila’s behavior, they immediately head to Pakistan, where they hope to make Naila back into the obedient daughter they once believed her to be.  It soon becomes clear that this is not a simple family bonding trip.  Naila’s family has an agenda, to marry her off to the first worthy man.  In their eyes, it is the only way to set her back on the right path. Desperate, terrified and grieving for the loss of both her boyfriend and the parents she though she knew, Naila must try to find her way out of an unthinkable future.

I tore through this one, both drawn in by Saeed’s evocative description of life in Pakistan and by my growing need to know whether or not Naila would ever be okay again.  There’s a lot of pain in this one, but there is endurance and resilience and survival here as well. Trust me, this is great and satisfying summer reading.

Great for: If you loved Mitali Perkins Secret Keeper, then you will love this as well (and vice versa, although Secret Keeper is a bit sadder in some ways).

Age Recommendation: I’d recommend this for Grades 9+ and it is definitely the kind of YA that adult readers will thoroughly enjoy.

Sex, Nudity, Dating – People kiss. A South Asian woman marries someone outside her community. Naila’s parents plan to arrange her marriage. They speak of people who are divorced and should feel ashamed.  A woman is accused of having an affair.  A woman becomes pregnant. A woman is very ill.  A woman has a miscarriage.
Profanity – “Thank God”, “hell”,
Death, Violence and Gore – A woman is slapped so hard she is thrown to the floor, bleeding.  A woman is raped, the scene is brief and it is not straight out called or identified as rape, but it is.  There are repeated statements that a man would kill a woman if certain things happen.  A woman is slapped, shoved and repeatedly kicked.  Her nose bleeds and her lip is swollen.  A man is punched.
Drugs, Alcohol and Smoking – People, including teens smoke a hookah pipe.  Someone is given drugs in a drink.
Frightening or Intense Things – A person skips meals for an extended period of time.

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A Beautiful Lie

A Beautiful Lie by Irfan Master

Author Bio: English author of Pakistani and Indian heritage.

Are you the type who leafs past the prologue, eager to get on with the story?  Don’t do it!  Read the first line, only the first line and you will feel compelled to continue.  You don’t even need to worry about coming up with a book talk if you want to convince readers to grab this one.  Just read the prologue aloud.  It is nearly impossible to resist.

Bilal’s father is dying and he must shoulder this burden alone.  His mother is already gone and his older brother is never home, preferring to spend his time mixed up with troublemakers.  As India nears Partition, Bilal is certain of one thing only, that it would break his father’s heart to learn that his beloved India was going to be divided.  Dedicated to protecting his father, Bilal begins his beautiful lie, allowing his father to pass without ever knowing of the rocky future.

A Beautiful Lie does a remarkable job of evoking the feeling of tension and unrest that must have filled those days.  In some strange way it reminds me of Betsy and the Great World which details the mood in Europe immediately proceeding the first World War.  So many books are set during actual conflicts, or follow characters who are actively engaged in the fighting.  It’s another thing entirely to follow those who were affected but were not directly part of the action and to capture their fears, concerns and dreams and A Beautiful Lie does it masterfully.

The moral side of Bilal’s dilemma is not ignored.  Throughout the book, his own feelings shift and change.  Others join him in the lie, some after persuasion and some devotedly, some who must be lied to in turn.  It’s very well done and would make for an excellent discussion topic.

Great for: I highly recommend using this is in a classroom setting with students who are old enough.  There is so much here to talk about and think about!  Plus, it serves as an introduction to a very interesting historical period that may be unfamiliar to them.

Age Recommendation: I would recommend this for Grades 5+.  I think some of my gifted third and fourth graders would have enjoyed it, but it does have some tough vocabulary (handled with a glossary) and the topic is not necessarily an easy one especially if readers lack background knowledge.

Sex, Nudity, Dating – None.
Profanity – “damned”, “damn”, “son of a swine”, “son of a dog”, “son of a cockroach”, “idiot”, “hell”,
Death, Violence and Gore – Bilal’s mother passed away five years ago.  His father is dying of cancer.  There is violence and unrest in India.  Mobs are burning homes, killing women and children.  There are cockfights in the cemetery.  Men discuss arson, noting that a burnt, crisp corpse makes a statement. A boy is told to “wallop” someone if he gets caught.  Someone threatens to bite someone else.  Two mobs form and fight, enveloped in dust, wielding sticks.  One man is hit in the end, blood streams from his head, he convulses and dies.  Although Bilal thinks about all the ways a person could be harmed or killed, he does not elaborate on this thinking.  A man is punched and slapped.  A man is hit in the face with a stick.  A boy is thrown to the ground and pinned to the floor.  Blood streams down a man’s face.  A man is badly beaten.  Boys throw stones at another boy.  Bilal has read about how gladiators were forced to fight to the death.  There is another cockfight; this one is described.  There is a mob that becomes violent. Men fight with rocks and stones; they beat each other with tree branches.  Other men use machetes and other knives to cut each other. Many are injured or killed.  The scene is described as  “vision of hell”.   A man tries to hold together what is left of his face, which is burned and blistered. At the mob scene a barrel of oil is tipped over and lit.  A boy has killed someone in self-defense during the violence. Bilal remembers seeing encyclopedia pictures of animal carcasses with torn flesh and jutting bones.  Someone threatens to burn another person alive. He gets as far as dousing the person with oil.  People are burned in their homes.  A boy watches his father die and holds his body closely.
Drugs, Alcohol and Smoking – People smoke cigarettes. People smoke lime and betel rolled in eucalyptus leaves.  A teen smokes.  Bilal’s brother smokes.  A Reverend gets drunk.
Frightening or Intense Things – A cobra is loose in a classroom.  There is a lot of tension built into situations in this book.  Trouble is brewing and often Bilal (and the reader) must wait to see what happens.  Two people are held against their will when the peace is broken.  There are some descriptions of how Bapuji looks as he gets sicker and sicker.

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