Saints and Misfits

£4.99

Saints and Misfits

Children’s / Teenage fiction: General, modern and contemporary fiction Children’s / Teenage general interest: Philosophy, Religion and beliefs Children’s / Teenage general interest: Hinduism Children’s / Teenage general interest: Buddhism Children’s / Teenage general interest: Judaism Children’s / Teenage general interest: Christianity Children’s / Teenage general interest: Islam Children’s / Teenage general interest: Other religions and spiritual traditions Educational: Religious studies: Hinduism Educational: Religious studies: Buddhism Educational: Religious studies: Judaism Educational: Religious studies: Christianity Educational: Religious studies: Islam Educational: Religious studies: Other religions Children’s / Teenage: Personal and social topics

Author: S.K. Ali

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Collection: Saints and Misfits #1

Language: English

Published by: Salaam Reads / Simon & Schuster Books for Young Readers

Published on: 13th June 2017

Format: LCP-protected ePub

Size: 2 Mb

ISBN: 9781481499262


Saints and Misfits

Saints and Misfits—a William C. Morris Award finalist and an Entertainment Weekly Best YA Book of the Year—is a “timely and authentic” (School Library Journal, starred review) debut novel that feels like a modern day My So-Called Life…starring a Muslim teen.

There are three kinds of people in my world:

1. Saints, those special people moving the world forward. Sometimes you glaze over them. Or, at least, I do. They’re in your face so much, you can’t see them, like how you can’t see your nose.

2. Misfits, people who don’t belong. Like me—the way I don’t fit into Dad’s brand-new family or in the leftover one composed of Mom and my older brother, Mama’s-Boy-Muhammad.

Also, there’s Jeremy and me. Misfits. Because although, alliteratively speaking, Janna and Jeremy sound good together, we don’t go together. Same planet, different worlds.

But sometimes worlds collide and beautiful things happen, right?

3. Monsters. Well, monsters wearing saint masks, like in Flannery O’Connor’s stories.

Like the monster at my mosque.

People think he’s holy, untouchable, but nobody has seen under the mask.

Except me.

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