Reviews

The Marvelous Mirza Girls by Sheba Karim

ravenclawomanistcyborgwitch's review

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3.0

Loved detailed presentation of New Delhi, India. Story lost me for a bit.

joan_illusion's review against another edition

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slow-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? N/A
  • Strong character development? No
  • Loveable characters? No
  • Diverse cast of characters? No
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? No

1.0

This is so NOT the muslim representation we need 🙃🙃🙃

heilyara's review against another edition

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Reading slump

bklyn76's review

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3.0

Cute, not super predictable. Would give 3.5 ⭐️, if I could!

grabowsk_'s review

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emotional lighthearted slow-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? Character
  • Strong character development? It's complicated
  • Loveable characters? Yes
  • Diverse cast of characters? Yes
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes

2.5

emmawoody03's review

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funny hopeful lighthearted fast-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? Character
  • Strong character development? Yes
  • Loveable characters? Yes
  • Diverse cast of characters? Yes
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? It's complicated

4.0

payal_reads_alot's review

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2.0

A bit of coming of age, a bit of coming into culture, a bit of self-esteem builder. But all in all, it was just a slice of life book. There were some awkward parts. As expected Noreen, who was born and brought up in America as a third gen Pakistani, didn't fit in well in India in many situations. I thought the explanation of using incorrect grammar was very well put.



HOWEVER, there was too much repetition of nearly everything. All the foods gave her indigestion, all the ruins/masjids gave her a spiritual experience, all the people she met were striking, just too much! As an Indian I get that we're nearly always TOO MUCH but really?



And the whole MeToo thing was interesting. While I get what the author was trying to do, it didn't really fit with the story. Again, slice of life but really I didn't understand at the end what this was supposed to be. Eat, Pray, Love, but desi style? No thanks, didn't even like the first iteration of it.

mezzythedragon's review

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What really killed this audiobook is the flat narrator. There were some interesting parts, but ultimately I couldn’t get into it because of the lifeless delivery.

Also it would have been nice if the synopsis had a #metoo TW. After last year’s slew of harrowing #metoo fiction, I couldn’t take any more, especially if the perps don’t answer for their crimes. Here, the so-called resolution was, “Oh well.” Talk about minimizing!

the_tea_collector22's review

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2.0

CW: discussion of sexual assault & harassment, MeToo, victim blaming, mention of hate crimes based off people's faith, mention of Islamophobia

I wanted to like this book because it's posed as a girl going through grief and getting to travel to India as a way of honoring her late aunt, and maybe just falling for a local boy. However the plot felt a bit too unfocused, and there were moments where it seemed to lose it's main thread of healing through grief (which is at least what I thought the main thread would be).

While I didn't mind the meandering plot at times, because grief and healing aren't linear, the MeToo sections just felt out of place. And while it is certainty a topic worth covering, I don't think the characters' choices to stand aside and not make any clear comments condemning that behavior was necessarily the best choice. Maybe it's just that there wasn't much nuance in the discussion, but having a character basically run away to be upset over his family's image & publicly abstain from commenting & condemning it, just felt like a negative choice to include if discussing sexual harassments & abuse.

Additionally I was bothered by the age gap between the main character and the love interest. The MC is 18, and the LI, we learn about half way into the book, is 24. Personally, as someone who is 23, having the characters have a 6 yr age gap just took me out of the story and I no longer wanted the romance element. While the LI didn't do anything "wrong" (except his handling of the MeToo situation IMO), I still could not get over how he was so much older than her and it just bothered me. If he would have been like 20 I doubt their relationship would be bothered me, but having him be 6 years older just really made me want to stop reading any romantic scenes between them. That being said, none of the other characters, include the adults/ parents, find the age gap odd so maybe it's just me? Either way it bothered me.

I also think the narrator did a good job giving the characters pretty distinct voices and inflection. Some voices were kind of similar and took a second to distinguish, but most were different enough it was easy to keep the characters straight while listening to it.

All that being said, this book just wasn't what I was expecting about a healing journey of grief, and just wasn't for me based off those expectations. Additionally I'm not Indian, Pakistani nor Muslim, so I can't personally comment on the representation in the book.