Saints and Misfits
2017 • 336 pages

Ratings5

Average rating3.9

15

Yet another debut novel that I loved! Saints and Misfits covers a few months in the life of Janna, a Muslim high school student. It opens with her assault by “the monster” as she names him, a well-respected Muslim boy at her mosque. The book covers some normal high school events - finding out her crush likes her back, sneaking up to the roof of the school to talk to her best friend, struggling with her parents not understanding her - but also involves things unique to her experience. She has to exist in the same spaces as her assailant, and she's better at it some times than others. She has to find a way to deal with leaked photos of her in gym class without her hijab. (Her gym classes aren't co-ed, so it's okay to be without her hijab - it's not okay for men to see her that way.) Meanwhile, she's playing chaperone for her brother's courtship, and being forced to share a room with her mother because her brother is moving back in with them.

It's an interesting, fairly light read about a culture Americans like to demonize, and a topic that doesn't get enough attention. I enjoyed Janna's personality and determination, and her relationship with the senior citizen she helps take care of down the hall.

I liked the ending. It showed her slowly building up the courage to confront her assailant, and then doing so. While we didn't get a concrete resolution, it was strongly implied, and I'm okay with that.

You can find all my reviews at Goddess in the Stacks.

January 22, 2018Report this review