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352 pp.
| Simon
| July, 2024
|
Trade
ISBN 9781665938440
$19.99
|
Ebook
ISBN 9781665938464
$10.99
(
2)
YA
In this near-future version of Texas, abortion is a crime punishable by a lifetime jail sentence. Abortion pills and IVF are also illegal. Enter two Muslim teens: Laylah, an ultra-organized, straight Indian American who has her sights set on becoming a gynecologist; and Noor, a queer Palestinian American who dreams of becoming an investigative journalist. The two are writing a step-by-step guide for teens on obtaining safe abortions; it's only after Laylah discovers she is pregnant that she realizes how unrealistic the guide is, particularly the difficulty of obtaining abortion pills. Feeling deep
sharam (a neologism Laylah coins combining the words
shame and
haram, something forbidden in Islam), Laylah keeps her pregnancy secret, while Noor has a secret of her own: she's investigating the wife of the local imam, whom she suspects of stealing mosque donations. Along the way, Noor and Laylah discover the unlikeliest of allies and learn that "everyone is so much more than they appear to be." The book is peppered with Bollywood and American pop cultural references and includes a disturbing yet fascinating subplot in which Laylah learns about state-sponsored sterilization in 1970s India. This nuanced representation of Muslim views on reproductive rights is a timely, fast-paced novel that spins a terrifying, cautionary tale about a possible future.