Six Truths and a Lie by Ream Shukairy
Woah baby, that was a wildly fantastic ride of a read. The very first page grabs you and makes you sit up and pay attention. I have never been so happy to sit in a waiting room so that I could read in peace. This 387 page book is mature YA, I was gifted the knowledge prior to reading that there is a line that is toed, possibly stepped on, but not carelessly crossed, so I will gift that knowledge on to you, so that you might enjoy the story without that anxiety. Told from numerous perspectives, a group of Muslim teens find themselves arrested for an act of terror. Strangers from different schools, different backgrounds, and different dreams for their future, are fiction, but their stories, their secrets, the broken system that they find themselves in, all feels very real. The plausibility and commentary from an OWN Muslim author is incredible, I do wish their was more spiritual centering, Islamic framing, or even a more Muslim conscience present. Some of the characters do discuss hijab and one does find solace in prayer, but none of them really pour their heart out to Allah swt in the isolation of their cells, and in the predicament they are placed in, and it seems like they would. Ultimately though the writing is remarkable, it has been a long time since I was truly tempted to skip ahead and read the last few pages because my heart was racing. There is just one storyline thread that is so overly emphasized that comes close to a haram line, that I wish was a little down played so that I, as an Islamic school librarian, could encourage younger teens to pick up the book and dive in.
SYNOPSIS:
It is the fourth of July, and the MSA kids from the local different high schools are gathering at the beach for bonfires, fireworks, and socializing. Everyone present will witness a crime, six teens though will be accused of committing it. Qays, the Palestinian golden soccer boy who can charm everyone and anyone. Nasreen, the outcast from a private Catholic school there to meet someone. Samia the hijab wearing social media star. Muzhda the Afghan refugee with undocumented parents. Zamzam the girl with a singular dream to be a doctor, and Abdullahi, the quiet EMT in training. Six strangers whose histories and alibies link them to the outside world, but leave them skeptical of one another as they face charges in a world not concerned with the truth.
WHY I LIKE IT:
I love that the characters are Muslim and feel so real and developed. The characters are not tropes or their families stereotypical. They know what Islamophobia faces them from others, they know what internalized issues they are dealing with, and they are not having a religious identity crises amidst everything else they are experiencing. The writing allows each voice to be unique and clear, which is quite impressive as there are a lot of perspectives that move the plot along. It is really hard to write a review that doesn’t spoil the book, so yes I’m being vague, and you are welcome.
FLAGS:
There are a lot of profanities not just when the stakes are high, but normalized as well throughout. There are close relationships between boys and girls. They take about dating. There is weed, and the legalities of using, being in possession, and being high. There is lying, death, incarceration, Islamophobia, some physical abuse mentioned. There is a story line of a girl that doesn’t know if she is attracted to girls, she doesn’t act on it, but it is something that has tangled up her alibi and she choses not to explore it, but it keeps coming back up.
TOOLS FOR LEADING THE DISCUSSION:
This would be an awesome mature YA book club, just like some of the characters are being held in juvie and some being tried as adults, I think for Muslim readers a little older will benefit and be able to process, discuss, and see themselves in the book. The book mentions that it could happen to anyone, and for a Muslim audience, to recognize and discuss that concept would be beneficial and engaging.