Towelhead
by:
Alicia Erian (author)
It is August 1990. Saddam Hussein has just invaded Kuwait, and Jasira's mother has bought her daughter a one-way ticket to Texas to live with her strict Lebanese father. Living in a neat model home in Charming Gates, just outside of Houston, Jasira struggles with her father's rigid lifestyle and...
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It is August 1990. Saddam Hussein has just invaded Kuwait, and Jasira's mother has bought her daughter a one-way ticket to Texas to live with her strict Lebanese father. Living in a neat model home in Charming Gates, just outside of Houston, Jasira struggles with her father's rigid lifestyle and the racism of her classmates, who call her "towelhead." For the first time, the painful truth hits her: she's an Arab. Her aching loneliness and growing frustration with her parents' conflicting rules drive her to rebel in very dangerous ways. Most disturbingly, she becomes sexually obsessed with the bigoted army reservist next door, who alternately cares for, excites, and exploits her.
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Format: paperback
ISBN:
9780743285124 (0743285123)
Publish date: April 10th 2006
Publisher: Simon & Schuster
Pages no: 336
Edition language: English
Category:
Young Adult,
Novels,
Literature,
Book Club,
Adult Fiction,
Family,
Coming Of Age,
Contemporary,
Sociology,
Abuse,
Adolescence
Powerful - uncomfortable - predatory
*sigh*I picked up the book Towelhead: A novel because I was intrigued by the New York Times' review of the movie directed by Alan Ball (of Six Feet Under and American Beauty). I also picked it up, because I'm always interested in how authors' portray the burgeoning sexuality of preteen and teen girl...
This was kind of a disturbing read and it make me uncomfortable. Maybe that was the point but I'm still not a fan.
I should admit that I really don't know what's going on with thirteen year olds these day. So, maybe this book is a frank and sensitive portrait of a precocious abused kid. Or, it's a prurient, skeevy potboiler dressed up as a frank and sensitive portrait, etc.I'm thinking probably the latter, but ...