The Sharaf family live in a small Afghan community in northern Virginia. When they fled their home during the Russian invasion and came to America all they wanted was a better life for their children. The father, Rahmat, felt he had missed the boat but would do anything to ensure his four children went to the best schools and had prestigious futures. Their home is filled with love and laughter while Rahmat works multiple jobs to make ends meet. He eventually stumbles upon some luck with his cleaning business. As he begins to surpass his wildest dreams and become financially stable, he moves his family to the biggest, fanciest house he can afford. The eldest son, Omer, only gets by in school, so Rahmat pins his hopes and dreams and identity on Zorah. She is an excellent student, well-liked and beautiful. As Zorah struggles with her father’s strict expectations, she begins to spiral. Zorah is surrounded by American teenagers who sneak around, do as they please and have little regard for rules. Unexpectedly, when tragedy befalls the Sharaf family, the world is watching. A culture clash between traditions, money, and vile gossip — everyone has something to say. Narrated in a series of very short chapters structured as interviews after the fact, this story shares voices from every possible angle. I felt this unique structure and empathized with the underlying push and pull of starting over in a new country where everyone loves to criticize anything that is different. At the same time, I felt like the novel dragged and was very repetitive. Like, not love for me. But I must say the consensus and reviews are favorable and I may be an outlier on this one. ⭐⭐⭐

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