


She is a sixteen-year-old Australian Palestinian-Muslim girl with green-blue eyes and light brown hair.

It was fun to read, never boring really and a fast read. Another thing was her temper oh God, in fact one of my favorite parts was where Tia and her friend asked about her temper issues. Amal was never boring, she always had something to do, to think about, to talk about. The book updated my comeback cum sarcasm vocabulary list and made me laugh. It made the book more real and Amal’s experiences relatable. The first thing I noticed was how Amal wasn’t a miss two-goody shoes, I loved it, she made mistakes, in fact it took her time to realize that hijab isn’t just a piece of clothing you wear on the head, it goes waaaay beyond dressing and spans every area of your being.

DOES MY HEAD LOOK BIG IN THIS? Went through the series of anxiety attacks and list of issues that every girl in hijab goes through every time, especially when they start. Her life changed when she made a decision to start wearing the hijab full time during a holiday, she had to consider several things before making her decision, if her school would accept it, if people would harass her in buses, if her future is still guaranteed despite the hijab and if her extended families and friends would accept or judge her. She attends a private high school, has two different sets of friends(two Muslims and two non-Muslims), a massive crush on one of the popular guys at school - a non-Muslim, of course enemies at school, and a grumpy old neighbor. Her mum’s a dentist and her dad’s a doctor. Amal is an Australian-Palestinian Muslim with really long surnames.
