Rate this book

Tyrant's Daughter (2014)

by J.C. Carleson(Favorite Author)
3.81 of 5 Votes: 2
ISBN
1306397553 (ISBN13: 9781306397551)
languge
English
publisher
Alfred A. Knopf Books for Young Readers
review 1: Laila is the daughter of a ruler in an unnamed Middle Eastern country. Growing up, she was told that he was a king, her brother would rule next, and their family's luxuries were justified by their position in government. After her uncle kills her father, she is forced to flee to the USA and start a new life in suburban Washington DC. As Laila navigates her new world, her mother works with rebels, allies, and the CIA. The Tyrant's Daughter is a story of family, change, and betrayal. It's an eye opener culturally and an amazing book. There were a few things I didn't like - Ian and Amir felt a little underdeveloped, I wanted to see more of their relationships with Laila; as well as the silly high school drama that didn't fit in.However, the themes in this book are incredible,... more and this is a must read for everyone.
review 2: Things I liked:-The story is compelling. Without going over the top the reader understands the horrors of Laila's distant home and how unaffected most Americans are. -This story provides an interesting other side to the news and images we are shown on the news. -Laila's is accessible, she is a character you almost instantly connect with, despite how different her background is from most everyone.-There's not an abundance of blame placing. I didn't feel guilty about being an American but I did think about issues in America and Western culture. The book encouraged me to examine and question. This is important because it could easily sling blame, on both sides, but it doesn't and I think that is the great power of this book. I could easily see myself teaching this book to kids, kids who come from a variety of backgrounds, and all of them taking important questions away from the reading. PLUS, I think they would enjoy the reading. Things I didn't like:-She's pretty much white on the cover. That is absurd.-I wonder how realistic some of Laila's responses to American culture really are. Her actions at the dance and with boys in general seem a bit off from what I've read and seen about women from her part of the world and background. -The ending was a bit...soft. I like happy endings but that wasn't going to happen in this book. I don't know how the ending of this could have been happy or easy or not leave sadness, but there must have been a way. The ending is not bad, it's just not real. With so many real elements of the story the ending feels false, like it's given to the reader as a consolation prize at a fair, a cheap trinket that you know will break, you know is an illusion but you take it anyway. It doesn't do justice to the story or the characters. less
Reviews (see all)
aigness
Heads-up: some kissing scenes in detail, some suggestive dialogue and a mild sexual situation.
palisa
Don't skip the author's note and the commentary by Cheryl Benard at the end.
Lynzi
An interesting story...but it just didn't seem quite real to me.
ellisgurl
Highly recommend! Loved all the twists!
Brittney
CONFUSING.
Write review
Review will shown on site after approval.
(Review will shown on site after approval)