![]() This debut should speak to anyone who has felt like an outsider for any reason. Using a winning mix of humor and sensitivity, Abdel-Fattah ably demonstrates that her heroine is, at heart, a teen like any other. ![]() It feels like I'm drowning in it all”), her faith-and an array of ever-ready quips-help her navigate an often-unforgiving world. ![]() , today? I mean, just turn on the television, open a newspaper. Their worries, in fact, are well-founded: Amal attracts her share of stares and taunts both at school and around town, but she finds strength, not only from her convictions, but from her close-knit group of friends, who for various reasons-being Japanese, Jewish, nerdy or body-conscious-are perceived as being outside “the norm.” As Amal struggles with her identity in a post-9/11 world (“Do you have any idea how it feels to be me, a Muslim Amal knows she will face discrimination by classmates and misinformed people but she is committed to her decision her parents are initially concerned, but ultimately rally behind her. Editions for Does My Head Look Big in This: 0439919479 (Hardcover published in 2007), (Paperback published in 2011), 043992233X. Headstrong and witty, 16-year-old Amal, an Australian-Muslim-Palestinian (“That means I was born an Aussie and whacked with some seriously confusing identity hyphens”) decides during winter break from her posh private school that she's ready to wear the hijab, the Muslim head scarf, fulltime, as a testament to her faith. With an engaging narrator at the helm, Abdel-Fattah's debut novel should open the eyes of many a reader. ![]()
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