I'm not going to gush about the well-written plot, characters, and storyline, I'm going to dive in to the remarkably on point representation of the Muslim character. I absolutely love Yasmin and how she is written. She is quirky, strong, funny, fallible, cool, articulate, unapologetic, and trying to keep it all together. The mood she gives off is both reflective and goals, not only for Muslims but for so many of all faiths. She doesn't want to be shouldering the burden of representing an entire faith, nor is she only her religion. I love her comments, such as "You know how to Google, so go Google," "Muslims don't have a hive mind, don't ask us to speak for everyone," and yes she can flirt with her husband, and be scared to be a mom, and have mental health concerns, and be grieving, and be a hardcore crocheter too. I don't know how the author researched this character and the framing of her, but she did an outstanding job, it reads real and fleshed out and so so reflective of unapologetic Muslims who are trying to live their lives. I love the framing of some of the other characters being nervous around a Muslim, nervous to say the wrong thing, or come across a certain way. Yasmin doesn't know their thoughts, the reader does, and I love that as a result she treats them how she treats them, and readers can see what a little familiarity can do to break stereotypes. There are micro (and huge) aggressions in the book, but not all are dealt with or pushed back on, the book doesn't need to get preachy, the multiple characters "show" so much more than needs to be "told" and spelt out. The book is remarkably clean for an adult book. The characters read separate and you don't confuse them. Overall an enjoyable read, with likeable characters, introspection and timely themes: racism, friendship, creating something, and standing up for yourself, your friends, and what you believe in. It was a treat to be part of the sensitivity readers for this book, I hope it becomes widely available in North America.