Free Radicals
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- $10.99
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- $10.99
Publisher Description
Afghan-American Mafi’s sophomore year gets a whole lot more complicated when she accidentally exposes family secrets, putting her family back in Afghanistan in danger in this smartly written YA debut.
Sixteen-year-old Mafi Shahin is well-aware that life is not always fair. If it was fair, her parents might allow her to hang out with a member of the male species, other than her cat Mr. Meowgi. If it was fair, her crush and basketball hottie Jalen Thomas might see her as more than just her brother's kid sister. And if it was fair, her baba’s brother and wife would be able to leave Afghanistan and come to America.
Life might not be fair—but she can make it a bit more even. Working as the Ghost of Santa Margarita High, Mafi serves dollops of justice on her classmates’ behalf as the school’s secret avenger. They leave a note declaring the crime and Mafi ensures the offender receives an anonymous karmic-sized dose of payback. Keeping her identity as the Ghost a secret sometimes means Mafi has to lie. But as those lies begin to snowball both at school and at home, even compromising their family’s secret past and putting their relatives back in Afghanistan at risk, Mafi is forced to decide how she wants to live her life—trying to make the world more fair from the shadows or loudly and publicly standing up for what’s right.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Sixteen-year-old, prank-loving Mafi Shahin, who is white and Afghan American, doles out justice on her classmates' behalf as an enigmatic vigilante called Ghost. The process is simple: the aggrieved leave a note with Mafi's 12-year-old neighbor, Cole, who delivers it to Mafi. As Ghost, Mafi then seeks revenge in the form of harmless, but effective, pranks. Mafi only has four rules for herself: don't get caught; never reveal your identity; avoid police involvement; and don't get emotionally invested. But keeping her superhero-esque identity a secret means she must lie to her friends, family, and even her childhood crush. When Mafi's mistruths compromise a family secret and jeopardize relatives in Afghanistan, she must decide whether to continue upholding her charades and deceptions, or own up to the truth. The vigilante plot device introduces an electrifying complication to the emotionally grounded, interpersonally focused conflict, adding textured layers to this anticipatory read. By deploying a healthy dose of sharp humor across a pacey plot that's populated by an intersectionally diverse cast, Riesen crafts an emphatic and empathetic debut that doesn't shy away from exploring grave themes such as imperialism, intergenerational trauma, war, and xenophobia. Ages 12–up.