Readers are immersed in the teens’ world, feeling the frustrations of facing prejudice, the sadness of losing loved ones, and the hope that comes from mutual understanding. Told through alternating perspectives, this compelling love story brings together a wide variety of cultures, political issues, and personality types. From the moment Adam sees Zayneb’s journal fall out of her bag at the airport, readers will be waiting impatiently for their connection to unfold - but, with such different temperaments, their relationship does not develop in an easy, straight line, and their doubts and the obstacles they face are convincing. What they have in common: each has been keeping a “Marvels and Oddities” journal (“recording the wonders and thorns in the garden of life”), based on an ancient book they’d both discovered. Adam is a calm peace-seeker who wishes he didn’t feel quite so alone. Adam, a Muslim Canadian college freshman, is returning to Doha to see his father and sister, with some unfortunate news about his health that he’s reluctant to disclose. Zayneb’s passion for justice fills her with righteous anger that she finds difficult to direct. Zayneb, a Muslim American high school senior, leaves for spring break in Doha, Qatar, a week early when she is suspended for a note she wrote in class about her Islamophobic history teacher.
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