Does My Head Look Big in This?

Does My Head Look Big In This?
Author Randa Abdel-Fattah
Country Australia
Language English
Genre Young Adult Fiction
Publisher Pac Macmillan (Australia)
Publication date
August 1st, 2005
Media type Paperback
Pages 348
ISBN 0-439-91947-9
OCLC 74648918
LC Class PZ7.A15892 Doe 2007

Does My Head Look Big In This? is author Randa Abdel-Fattah's first novel. It was released in Australia, by Pan MacMillan Australia, on August 1, 2005. It won the Australian Book Industry Award and Australian Book of The Year Award for older children.[1]

The story revolves around (and is told from the view point of) a sixteen-year-old Muslim girl who decides to wear the hijab, a religious veil, full-time. Her decision leads to different reactions from her friends, family, and peers.

Plot

Sixteen year old, Amal Mohamed Nasrullah Abdel-Hakim is an Australian Palestinian-Muslim girl who lives in Melbourne with her father, doctor Mohamed, and mother, dentist Jamila. During the winter break before her second semester at McCleans Preparatory School, Amal debates wearing the hijab (the religious Muslim head covering) as a full timer (meaning that she would have to wear it in front of males who weren't immediate family). While trying to make her decision, Amal takes advice from Yasmeen Khan and Leila Okulgen, her best friends from her Islamic junior high school. When she introduces her idea of wearing the hijab to her father and mother, they are hesitant but learn to accept it. As a test-run, Amal (while wearing a hijab) and her mother go to Chadstone Mall. After three hijab-wearing women say "Assalam-u-Alaikum" (the universal Islamic greeting meaning "peace be upon you") to Amal, she gets a sense that wearing a hijab binds Muslim women in some kind of universal sisterhood, and feels much more prepared to continue full-time.

The next day (the first day of second semester), Amal wears a hijab to school. Initially, she is met with uncertainty by her peers- including her chemistry partner and crush Adam- and her principal, Ms. Walsh, who is eventually persuaded by Amal's parents to allow her to wear the hijab. Eventually, though, Amal's classmates begin to accept her again. Over time, Adam and Amal become closer, their friends Simone and Josh begin to flirt (despite curvy Simone constantly worrying about her weight), and Amal starts to feel more proud of her hijab. She slowly develops a bond with Mrs. Vaselli, a cranky, elderly Greek neighbour, over their experiences of multiculturalism and family.

When the popular Adam invites Amal to his birthday party, her mother reluctantly gives her permission to go (even though Amal lies and says there will be no alcohol). At the party, Adam tries to kiss Amal, but at the last moment, she breaks away and tells him that she does not believe in having any physical relationships with a male before marriage. They begin to argue but the discussion ends when he states that they are "too different" and "don't understand each other". Infuriated, Amal leaves the party. At school, Amal notices that there is no "spark" between her and Adam anymore, but is proud that she put religion before her desires.

On Leila's birthday, Amal and Yasmeen lie to Leila's overprotective parents and take Leila out for dinner. However, they encounter Hakan, Leila's misogynistic older brother, and his girlfriend. Angry, he escorts Leila back home. Amal and Leila's parents are enraged that the girls lied and Amal is grounded. Leila, tired of pressure from her mother to marry, runs away from home the next day. Amal blames Leila's mother, Gulchin, and says that she didn't deserve Leila. Two months pass before Leila shows up at Amal's house near the end of Ramadan; she confesses that she ran away to a women's shelter, and couldn't bear the feeling of being unsafe. She and her mother forgive each other, and Gulchin begins to show more leniency towards Leila. By the end of the novel, Simone and Josh are dating, Amal has persuaded Mrs. Vaselli to reconnect with her estranged son, and she and Adam are becoming friends again. Amal realizes it is the different and imperfect immigrants that are her friends and family who have shaped who she is, and who she will become in the future. .

Characters

References

  1. Chandab, Taghred (2006-11-05). "Lifting the veil on the Islam experience". The Sun-Herald.
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