Picture of author.

Hena Khan

Forfatter af Amina's Voice

32+ Works 3,059 Members 147 Reviews

Om forfatteren

Includes the name: Hena Khan

Image credit: reading at 2018 Gaithersburg Book Festival By Slowking4 - Own work, GFDL 1.2, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=69292102

Serier

Værker af Hena Khan

Amina's Voice (2017) 762 eksemplarer
Under My Hijab (2019) 255 eksemplarer
Power Forward (2018) 175 eksemplarer
Amina's Song (2021) 146 eksemplarer
More to the Story (2019) 128 eksemplarer
It's Ramadan, Curious George (2016) 90 eksemplarer
Like the Moon Loves the Sky (2020) 69 eksemplarer
On Point (2018) 64 eksemplarer
The Worst-Case Scenario: Mars (2011) — Forfatter — 59 eksemplarer
Bounce Back (2018) 44 eksemplarer
The Worst-Case Scenario: Amazon (2011) — Forfatter — 39 eksemplarer

Associated Works

Once Upon an Eid: Stories of Hope and Joy by 15 Muslim Voices (2020) — Bidragyder — 223 eksemplarer
We Rise, We Resist, We Raise Our Voices (2018) — Bidragyder — 220 eksemplarer
The Hero Next Door (2019) — Bidragyder — 88 eksemplarer
No Voice Too Small: Fourteen Young Americans Making History (2020) — Bidragyder — 48 eksemplarer
Totally Middle School: Tales of Friends, Family, and Fitting In (2018) — Bidragyder — 17 eksemplarer

Satte nøgleord på

Almen Viden

Køn
female
Fødested
Maryland, USA

Medlemmer

Anmeldelser

It was amazing to see all of the different types of hijabs and the creativity of the women.
 
Markeret
JadynFlo | 15 andre anmeldelser | Apr 23, 2024 |
Asophisticated color-concept book featuring a contemporary family introduces Islam to young Muslims and children who don’t practice this faith.

Here the basic colors, plus gold and silver, are used to explain aspects of Islamic life. A young girl with very large eyes narrates, using short, childlike and occasionally forced verses to match colors and objects: “Gold is the dome of the mosque, / big and grand. / Beside it two towering / minarets stand.” She describes a red prayer rug, her mom’s blue hijab (headscarf), white kufis (traditional men’s woven hats), black ink for a calligraphic design, brown dates for Ramadan, orange henna designs, an Eid gift of a doll with a purple dress, a yellow zakat (charity) box, a green Quran (green has special significance in Islam, not explained here), and a silver fanoos, “a shiny lantern.” The glossary is excellent, explaining unfamiliar terms succinctly. The stylized illustrations, richly detailed, often play with the sizes of the objects in a surrealistic way. It is difficult to tell whether the family lives in the Middle East, Britain (home of the artist) or North America. The secular architecture looks Western, but the mosque looks very grand and Middle Eastern. The clothing styles are difficult to associate with a particular country. This both maximizes accessibility and deprives the tale of specificity—clearly a conscious trade-off.

A vibrant exploratory presentation that should be supplemented with other books. (Picture book. 4-7)

-Kirkus Review
… (mere)
 
Markeret
CDJLibrary | 58 andre anmeldelser | Apr 2, 2024 |
(Full disclosure I received a free e-ARC for review through NetGalley. Content warning for depictions of Islamophobia.)

When Aliya Javaid's parents announce that they're moving the family from Florida to Milwaukee, she and her older brother Ameen are none too happy. (Younger brother Ismail seems like more of the carefree type.) For starters, she's already one month into her freshman year. It'll be nice to live near her grandparents, but she doesn't want to leave her friends behind. And while Peace Academy does have a girls' basketball team, the bad news is that they kind of stink.

But the Javaids aren't the only addition to Peace Academy this year - the girls' basketball team has a new coach, Jessica Martinez, who is determined to execute a Mighty Ducks makeover. For Aliya, this means getting out of her own head, and learning to enjoy her victories at least as much as she dwells on her mistakes. As the team makes a slow but steady comeback, local and then state (and even national?) news outlets begin to pick up the story of the all-Muslim lineup. Armed with leading questions and an apparent agenda, the girls are forced to block more than just field goals. (Yeah, I had to look that term up.)

Based on a true story - that of the Salam School's girls' varsity team in the 2018-19 season - WE ARE BIG TIME is a gentle story about teamwork, friendship, and belonging. As the editorial director Rotem Moscovich notes in the ARC's front matter, Khan introduces elements of Islamophobia and discrimination without allowing them to dominate the girls' story - much as how the girls on the team handle the reports' asinine questions, redirecting their story in a more relevant direction. The depictions of female friendship and camaraderie are refreshing, and I really enjoyed the scenes with the extended (and super-supportive) Javaid family.
… (mere)
 
Markeret
smiteme | Mar 3, 2024 |
This was a beautiful story that was based around the Islamic faith. This is a wonderful story about love and family as well as religion. This book could be great for any ages and it can used to introduce different religions at a young age.
 
Markeret
amills21 | 1 anden anmeldelse | Mar 1, 2024 |

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Statistikker

Værker
32
Also by
5
Medlemmer
3,059
Popularitet
#8,349
Vurdering
4.2
Anmeldelser
147
ISBN
145
Sprog
1

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