A review by mirable
I Love I Hate I Miss My Sister by Amélie Sarn

3.0

Gut-wrenching torn from the headlines exploration of two Muslim sisters living in France who have vastly differing opinions on religion and its place in their lives and how those differences shape their choices, which lead to a horrible, deadly outcome.

Unfortunately, the story's impact is lessened by the writing; the narrative jumps from first to second person and back, present to flashback seemingly without rhyme or reason. I know this is a translation but believe this is most likely an accurate representation of how the story was originally presented.