Rating:
3 Stars
Themes:
Contemporary Fiction, Romance, New Adult
Thoughts:
This was an interesting read for me, it took quite a while for me to get through it due to a reading slump but anytime I managed to pick it up I just had to read on so there was no way I’d DNF it. I thought it was really interesting to see Soroya and her mother’s stories in parallel, especially seeing how the parents changed throughout events in their life that led them to be the parents they were in Soroya’s experiences. The book is full of flawed characters that make them feel more human and relatable and there’s a great combination of romance, historical fiction and psychological fiction.
Favourite Quote:
His words were only semi-comforting. He was missing the point, focusing on her dad’s rage as though it was a singular problem, not an issue a lot of British Muslim girls faced to some degree. It wasn’t Hossein Nazari that was crazy, it was the attitude of many men in her culture, the way they saw their daughters as pets to be controlled.
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