More to the Story

More to the Story
by Hena Khan (Author)

Booktalk: When Jameela Mirza is picked to be feature editor of her middle school newspaper, she’s one step closer to being an award-winning journalist like her late grandfather. The problem is her editor-in-chief keeps shooting down her article ideas. Jameela’s assigned to write about the new boy in school, who has a cool British accent but doesn’t share much, and wonders how she’ll make his story gripping enough to enter into a national media contest.

Jameela, along with her three sisters, is devastated when their father needs to take a job overseas, away from their cozy Georgia home for six months. Missing him makes Jameela determined to write an epic article–one to make her dad extra proud. But when her younger sister gets seriously ill, Jameela’s world turns upside down. And as her hunger for fame looks like it might cost her a blossoming friendship, Jameela questions what matters most, and whether she’s cut out to be a journalist at all…

Snippet: “Jameela!” Mama calls to me from the kitchen. “Can you go down and get the nice napkins? From the garage?”

“Okay.” I’d rather face the lizards in the garage than listen to Aleeza whine for a second longer. Ever since Bisma saw a baby gecko scamper along the wall and freakedout like it had escaped from Jurassic Park, I’m the only one of us girls who dares to go in there alone.

The air inside the garage is suffocating, which isn’t surprising, since it feels like five hundred degrees outside. This year Eid fell in August, the hottest month of the summer. Today also happens to be the kind of record-breaking scorcher of a day that earns Atlanta the nickname Hotlanta.

Copyright © 2019 Anastasia Suen All Rights Reserved.

Bold Women in Nevada History

Bold Women in Nevada History
by Kay Moore (Author)

Booktalk: From Sarah Winnemucca Hopkins, a Paiute who worked as an interpreter, to Mary Fulstone, a rural doctor who traveled through heat, snow, and mud to deliver more than 4,000 babies during her career, to Felice Cohn, who became the fourth female attorney to practice law before the US Supreme Court, the fourteen women featured in this collection broke down barriers of sexism, racism, and political oppression to emerge as heroines of their own time.

Snippet: The Denver Post newspaper helped Velma’s cause when it sent Robert O’Brien to interview her and write an article that was published in Reader’s Digest in January 1958. “The Mustangs’ Last Stand” sold ten million copies a month, and thiryy-eight million people in the United States and around the world read about Velma. O’Brien introduced her as, “The most tireless, outspoken friend the mustangs ever had is Mrs. Velma B. Johnston. . . . She stands five foot six in her high-heeled riding boots and weighs a spunky 108 pounds. But her diminutive size has not kept her from waging a bitter battle for the country’s mustangs–so bitter in fact, that friends and opponents now refer to her as ‘Wild Horse Annie.'”

Nonfiction Monday

It’s Nonfiction Monday!

Copyright © 2019 Anastasia Suen All Rights Reserved.