
Here to Stay
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Narrated by:
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Jonathan Todd Ross
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By:
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Sara Farizan
For most of high school, Bijan Majidi has flown under the radar. He gets good grades, reads comics, hangs out with his best friend, Sean, and secretly crushes on Elle, one of the most popular girls in his school. When he's called off the basketball team's varsity bench and makes the winning basket in a playoff game, everything changes in an instant.
But not everyone is happy Bijan is the man of the hour: An anonymous cyberbully sends the entire school a picture of Bijan photoshopped to look like a terrorist. His mother is horrified, and the school administration is outraged. They promise to find and punish the culprit.
All Bijan wants is to pretend it never happened and move on, but the incident isn't so easily erased. Though many of his classmates rally behind Bijan, some don't want him or his type to be a part of their school. And Bijan's finding out it's not always easy to tell your enemies from your friends....
©2018 Sara Farizan (P)2018 Recorded BooksListeners also enjoyed...




















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It was often uncomfortable as his white counterparts often wanted him to answer for things he had nothing to do with. He even had an exchange with a Black team mate(he was a basketball player) about how different their microaggressions faced were.
This book did have a handful of inclusion(queer, east asian, Black) as his love interest was also Black(though I wish it'd be heavier on the romance). Bijan was also half Jordanian and Iranian, and his father who'd passed was actually Christian so he grew up interfaith. I think the only complaint I had was the lack of descriptions. I'm sure the author didn't want to overly describe people in a non-flattering way(food references like said in the book) but I didn't know how to picture a ton of characters who always had screentime.
This author has a way of humanizing Muslim narratives and I'm glad this was my first read from them. I look forward to many more.
YA story with a muslim teen boy at the helm
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