
The finely drawn characters capture readers’ attention in this debut.Īutumn and Phineas, nicknamed Finny, were born a week apart their mothers are still best friends. This gripping political romance takes readers into the life of a young Muslim woman trying to navigate high school with the entire world attacking her right to her body and her faith.Ī moving coming-of-age narrative about the viciousness of Islamophobia and the unwavering power of love in post–9/11 America. Even so, their relationship threatens to upend the cultural norms of American suburbia. But Ocean doesn’t seem to care about other people-what they think, how they act, or what they believe. Shirin keeps waiting for Ocean to get bored or to realize that being with her could cost him his friends, his family, and potentially his basketball scholarship. She even takes him out to watch break-dance tournaments, the one diverse place in her life where she doesn’t feel alone in a crowd of whiteness. She can’t get Ocean off her mind: Although he annoys her with his constant questions and texts, which keep eating at her data limit, Ocean forces her to open up. But two things make this new school different: break-dancing and Ocean, the white lab partner who seems to see beyond Iranian-American Shirin’s hijab. Shirin doesn’t take all the bull of her white classmates and their racist ignorance.

Unlike her brother, Navid, she lies low, earbuds under her headscarf, ignoring all the racist comments thrown her way. After attending three different high schools, Shirin’s used to finding her way in new places.
