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BookDragon Blog

01 May / Broken Moon by Kim Antieau [in Bloomsbury Review]

Broken MoonA harrowing story about Nadira, a Pakistani teenager who is considered damaged goods, having paid for a crime that her older brother never committed, leaving her with a scarred face and abused young body. When her little brother is sold by her ruthlessly greedy uncle to work as a camel jockey for rich sheiks, Nadira disguises herself as a boy, gets herself sold into the desert, and enters an unimaginably brutal life of child exploitation. She survives – and helps the other young boys survive – by telling stories, à la Scheherazade, determined she will find her young brother and somehow return them both to safety and freedom.

Review: “In Celebration of Asian Pacific American Month: New & Notable Books,” The Bloomsbury Review, May/June 2007

Readers: Young Adult

Published: 2007

By Smithsonian Asian Pacific American Center in Fiction, Pakistani, Repost, Young Adult Readers Tags > Bloomsbury Review, BookDragon, Broken Moon, Family, Gender inequity, Girl power, Haves vs. have-nots, Kim Antieau, Siblings
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