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Samira Ahmed (1)

Auteur van Internment

Voor andere auteurs genaamd Samira Ahmed, zie de verduidelijkingspagina.

15+ Werken 2,102 Leden 87 Besprekingen

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Fotografie: Uncredited image found at author's website

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Werken van Samira Ahmed

Internment (2019) 842 exemplaren
Love, Hate and Other Filters (2018) 629 exemplaren
Mad, Bad & Dangerous to Know (2020) 290 exemplaren
Hollow Fires (2022) 157 exemplaren
The War to Save the Worlds (2021) 87 exemplaren
Ms. Marvel : Beyond the limit (2022) 31 exemplaren
Magic Has No Borders (2023) — Redacteur — 30 exemplaren
This Book Won't Burn (2024) 3 exemplaren
Ms. Marvel: Über die Grenzen (2022) 1 exemplaar

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Vampires Never Get Old: Tales with Fresh Bite (2020) — Medewerker — 235 exemplaren
A Universe of Wishes: A We Need Diverse Books Anthology (2020) — Medewerker — 190 exemplaren
Take the Mic: Fictional Stories of Everyday Resistance (2019) — Medewerker — 107 exemplaren
Color outside the Lines: Stories about Love (2019) — Medewerker — 81 exemplaren

Tagged

Algemene kennis

Geboortedatum
20th Century
Geslacht
female
Nationaliteit
USA
Geboorteplaats
Bombay, India
Woonplaatsen
Batavia, Illinois, USA
Opleiding
University of Chicago
Agent
New Leaf Literary & Media

Leden

Besprekingen

Layla was a regular American teenager until the new Islamophobic president enacted Exclusion Laws.

Muslims are being rounded up, their books burned, and their bodies encoded with identification numbers. Neighbors are divided, and the government is going after resisters. Layla and her family are interned in the California desert along with thousands of other Muslim Americans, but she refuses to accept the circumstances of her detention, plotting to take down the system. She quickly learns that resistance is no joke: Two hijabi girls are beaten and dragged away screaming after standing up to the camp director. There are rumors of people being sent to black-op sites. Some guards seem sympathetic, but can they be trusted? Taking on Islamophobia and racism in a Trump-like America, Ahmed’s (Love, Hate & Other Filters, 2018) magnetic, gripping narrative, written in a deeply humane and authentic tone, is attentive to the richness and complexity of the social ills at the heart of the book. Layla grows in consciousness as she begins to understand her struggle not as an individual accident of fate, but as part of an experience of oppression she shares with millions. This work asks the question many are too afraid to confront: What will happen if xenophobia and racism are allowed to fester and grow unabated?

A reminder that even in a world filled with divisions and right-wing ideology, young people will rise up and demand equality for all. (Realistic fiction. 13-18)

-Kirkus Review
… (meer)
 
Gemarkeerd
CDJLibrary | 37 andere besprekingen | Apr 2, 2024 |
Gr 9 Up—Alternating between the perspectives of Safiya, who is investigating hate crimes at her prep school and in
the local community, and Jawad, a missing Muslim public school student whose haunting voice tries to lead Safiya
to his body, Ahmed's gripping title shines a light on Islamophobia in society and the white supremacist radicalization
of teens online.
 
Gemarkeerd
BackstoryBooks | 5 andere besprekingen | Apr 1, 2024 |
Powerful YA novel. Excellent book.
 
Gemarkeerd
mjphillips | 5 andere besprekingen | Feb 23, 2024 |
Representation: Asian main characters, side Black characters
Trigger warnings: Bullying, racist and sexist slurs, white supremacy, death of a child and another loved one, kidnapping, grief, loss and blood depiction, car crash, near-death experience, antisemitism, imprisonment of children, physical injury, terrorism, emesis, xenophobia
Score: Seven points out of ten.
This review can also be found on rel="nofollow" target="_top">The StoryGraph.

Well. I remember this book circling my recommendations for a while then I added it and not much time afterward I finally picked it up and read it. When I finished it I felt like there was a lot to unpack here and I must say the novel is well executed most of the time but it can sometimes get disjointed with all the multiple POVs though I do understand the need for that. Before the story starts there is a glossary of the terms the novel will use; in fact I never knew alternative facts existed but now I know. Now then. It starts with the main character Safiya Mirza or Safiya for short and off the bat she tells me she essentially goes to a school of woke-washing virtue signallers and also she's a journalist.

Here is the other significant part, there's another character who recycled some materials to make a jetpack for a makerspace program or something along those lines but his English teacher accused him of having a bomb which implies a racial bias according to Safiya. Well when I think about that it makes sense in a way but anyone could've done that, also people talk about races a lot here. He was arrested and suspended but later released and all that only took place within the opening pages, I know that seems like a fast-paced beginning, and it is though I must admit after that this is a much slower paced crime novel than what I'm used to. At least it picks up steam toward the end. Someone hacked Safiya's website and she deduces that based on the name Ghost Skin and those quotes from a fascist manifesto the culprit is a white nationalist/supremacist but I don't know who is that person. Later on the other character gets kidnapped and killed out of racism but here's the thing, the book told me there was a guy called Nate who after going on some extremist websites and channels he became a racist and since the killing is racially motivated he must've done it.

I spend the next 200 pages watching Safiya figure out who is the killer after seeing the body with some flashbacks and flashforwards from the other character interspersed, when I read this part I felt a little tension which built towards the last few pages. There was a plot twist I didn't see coming since there was another character called Richard who also had involvement in the killing (I never expected that considering I've never heard of this person up until that point) and Safiya's testimony that their race (white) and privilege didn't save them but somehow they got the nicest prison was chilling. One of them captained two sports teams and held a record. They had mansions. The revelation shocked everyone and some even denied this claim despite the evidence. Wow. At least she got a little solace when the jig was up. Still, she believes there's more work to do to ensure this never happens again.
P.S. Technically the novel is non-linear? It jumps from time to time sometimes.
P.P.S. It's slightly outdated since it mentions Twitter and not X but I can forgive that since it was set before the change. That cameo was a little amusing.… (meer)
 
Gemarkeerd
Law_Books600 | 5 andere besprekingen | Jan 1, 2024 |

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Statistieken

Werken
15
Ook door
5
Leden
2,102
Populariteit
#12,246
Waardering
3.9
Besprekingen
87
ISBNs
80
Talen
5

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