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A review by bibliobrandie
Home Is Not a Country by Safia Elhillo
4.0
I saw that Elizabeth Acevedo recommended this book and that was all the push I needed to pick it up. This is a novel in verse with some magical realism, which are two of my favorite types of books and I think this is a good example of both. The story focuses on Nima, a young Muslim teen being raised by her single mother in the suburbs. Nima’s mom moved them to the United States for “a better life.” Nima doesn’t feel like she belongs in either her Arabic classes or at school, she has only one real friend, and she questions whether this really is the better life her mom was looking for when she left their home country. Nima spends time wondering and “what-if-ing” until one day she gets to glimpse into what life could have been like. Beautifully written with characters you root for and care about in a thoughtfully crafted setting. In the end, this is a beautiful story of the mother-daughter bond.
I book talked it to my 8th graders this week for the final week of National Poetry Month and am looking forward to hearing some reviews from them.
Off topic here but this is the second magical realism book I have read for middle grade this year and I wonder, in my library that is genrefied, does this belong in "fantasy" or "realistic fiction." It doesn't seem like it fits nicely in either.
I book talked it to my 8th graders this week for the final week of National Poetry Month and am looking forward to hearing some reviews from them.
Off topic here but this is the second magical realism book I have read for middle grade this year and I wonder, in my library that is genrefied, does this belong in "fantasy" or "realistic fiction." It doesn't seem like it fits nicely in either.