Show Notes
A Very Large Expanse of Sea
Tahera Mafi’s A Very Large Expanse of Sea is a beautiful book, perfect for springboarding into meaningful conversations with your teens.
The Context
Fear and mistrust might be knee-jerk reactions, but how we act and think afterward is our choice.
Understanding racism as a system we’re born into rather than an attitude held by a “bad person” (re: someone who wants to harm others because of their race) opens us to recognizing problematic racial patterns in ourselves.
It’s important to me to model for and instill in my teens
Post 9/11, many Muslims in the United States experienced harassment and persecution (see the articles below) because of the rampant fear and distrust.
The Book
A Very Large Expanse of Sea puts us into the mind of a 16-year-old Muslim girl, a year after the 9/11 attacks.
Shirin is miserable, isolated, and bitter because of her post 9/11 experiences. Two boys assaulted her in the days following the terrorist attack – and the police released them without repercussion. She is bullied on a daily basis and there is no one she is close to who can relate. As a result, she withdraws into a prickly shell, using her
As she navigates her first love, Shirin slowly starts to open up and make friends. She discovers that in closing herself off, she became the very thing she most despises.
You can find discussion questions for A Very Large Expanse of Sea here.
The Issues in A Very Large Expanse of Sea
- Academic Pressure
- Body Choice
- Bullying
- Friendship
- Discrimination/Stereotyping
- Dating Relationships
- Parent/Teen Relationships
- Sibling Relationships
- Teacher/Student Relationships
- Trauma
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