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Other words for home
Other words for home












With verse some things are highlighted in detail and other things skimmed over and yet at the end, not only do you feel like you understand Jude, but a lot of the side characters as well, which caught me off guard. I love that the style of the story telling somehow gives life to so much. As she comes of age and decides to wear hijab, as Islamaphobia shakes her sense of justice and her little sister is born, the reader sees her grow and change and mature and find themselves hoping that she will soar.

other words for home other words for home

Adjusting to school, life without baba and her brother, and all the other adaptations that moving to a new country entail are brought to life through Jude’s eyes and understanding of the world around her. Her American aunt and her Uncle that seems to have forgotten his Syrian upbringing, are gracious and welcoming and their daughter, Sarah, who is less than a year older than Jude and waxes and wanes in her approach to her cousin. Until a raid almost catches Jude and her brother and her parent’s decide it is time for Jude and her mother to journey to America, for a little while, to visit her mom’s brother and deliver the baby.Īmerica is not like it is in the 90’s movies that Jude loves: Pretty Woman, Legally Blond, Miss Congeniality. Until her brother starts sneaking out to meetings with other youth hoping to change the politics of their country. Until the crimes they only hear about happening in Aleppo and Damascus start to hit closer to home. With an older brother and a little sister on the way, life as told from her own perspective is pretty good. Jude is a 12-year-old girl living on the beach in Syria, watching American movies with her friends and hanging out at her dad’s store.

other words for home

Review Source: Notes from an Islamic School Librarian














Other words for home