CONTENT NOTIFICATIONS
Language: Infrequent Use,Language: Mild Language,Violence: General
20.9
Pakistani American author Saadia Faruqi has written a deeply empathetic story about a boy grappling with his father's mental illness and trying to find home and family in a new place.
Mo has gotten used to tuning out his father's fits of rage. He knows that the best way to respond is not to engage. Apparently, his mama knows that too-which is why she took an important job on the other side of the world, leaving Mo alone with Abbu.
Without Mama, Mo and Abbu move to Texas to live with Mo's aunt and cousin, Rayyan. The two boys could not be more different. Rayyan is achievement-driven and factual; Mo is a known "bad kid," just doing his best to survive in an unfair world (with the help of the South Asian folktales he treasures).
Still, there is a lot to like about living in Texas. Sundays at the mosque are better than he'd expected. And Rayyan doesn't dismiss Mo's fears and sees beyond his outer shell.
But even in a warm home and a school where he can start to see a future, Mo knows that the monster his father has within him can break out at any moment . . .
Beloved middle grade author Saadia Faruqi has crafted a poignant exploration of the impact of mental illness on families-and the love and hope that it takes to begin telling a different tale.
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PreK Standard MARC Records Cover Art |
For Grades 6-8
This collection features fiction titles selected for older middle school readers who are ready for longer, more layered stories that explore growing independence and changing perspective. Selections include realistic and speculative fiction with increased emotional and narrative complexity, offering stories that look beyond immediate experience and invite readers to engage with broader questions about identity, belonging, and the world around them.
Fiction, Realistic Fiction, Speculative Fiction, Coming-of-Age