
Like a Bird
A Novel
Author: Fariha Róisín
Narrator: Ariana Delawari
Unabridged: 12 hr 7 min
Format: Digital Audiobook Download
Publisher: Blackstone Publishing
Published: 09/15/2020
Categories: Fiction, Women, Literary Fiction

Author: Fariha Róisín
Narrator: Ariana Delawari
Unabridged: 12 hr 7 min
Format: Digital Audiobook Download
Publisher: Blackstone Publishing
Published: 09/15/2020
Categories: Fiction, Women, Literary Fiction
Fariha Róisín is an Australian-Canadian writer whose work has appeared in the New York Times, Al Jazeera, The Guardian, Vice, Fusion, Village Voice, and elsewhere. Her work often explores Muslim identity, race, pop culture, and film. It also examines the intersection of being a queer Bangladeshi navigating a white world. She is the author of the poetry collection, How to Cure A Ghost, and the guided journal, Being in Your Body. Like a Bird is her first novel.
Ariana Delawari, an Earphones Award–winning narrator, is a musician, director, and actress. A graduate of the USC School of Cinematic Arts, she directed We Came Home, an award-winning documentary about her journeys to Afghanistan since 9/11, the making of her album “Lion of Panjshir,” and her family story. She recently became the first female of Afghan descent to perform rock music live in Afghanistan in over thirty years. She is also a member of the LA Ladies Choir and was recently a speaker and performer at the inaugural TEDx Kabul.
i’m surprised by the negative reviews for this book. of course, people feel impacted by different things and are drawn to different types of writing, but the people who are so upset by this book seem to be angry because they expected it to be something it was never presented as. i’ve followed Fariha......more
*Slight spoilers ahead* I've long admired Roisin's writing and was thrilled to read her new novel. However, much fell flat for me. So much was left unexplained and I had a hard time believing the melodramatic plot. A family friend lures Taylia out to dinner knowing about her family trauma and loss o......more
I really wanted to like this book. But the writing is garbage, the character development is garbage. Just really bad.......more
I typically dont write reviews because I feel like they wont be seen under the excess of other reviews, but this book doesnt have many so I will give it a go. Fariha, thank you for writing this book and giving us positive representation of femme solidarity. One of the main things I loved about this......more
“Fariha’s voice is necessary in the world we live in today…She pulls you into her stories until you’re on the edge of your seat rooting for her subjects.” Rupi Kuar, #1 New York Times bestselling author
“Like A Bird is such a generous text, teeming with layered and beautifully living characters. A flaw of so much book praise is the quest to make every book universal. This book sings, specifically, to a people, while leaving the door open wide enough for anyone else to walk through.” Hanif Abdurraqib, New York Times bestselling author
“Engrossing…Well-paced and hopeful, this stirring work will resonate with those interested in stories of young women breaking free of oppression and trauma.” Publishers Weekly
“Like A Bird is a delicate tale of femininity, family, and trauma. Studded with jewels of poetic beauty and shaped by wisdom, this is a coming-of-age story about choosing oneself before choosing heritage—Taylia’s journey is ripe with the radical love of friendship, the power of ancestors and sisterhood, the wounds and joys of ‘the body’s ancient tapestry,’ and, as with Róisín’s other work, everything points to a sincere spirituality, a connection to and respect for the invisible world. Deeply moving and a marvel to read.” Aria Aber, Whiting Award–winning author of Hard Damage
“Like a Bird pulses brilliantly, bright as a fresh wound as it seals and heals itself, as we bear witness to the travails and trauma of our wise young narrator, Taylia. In Fariha Róisín’s delicate, deft prose, the heartbreak of violence and familial estrangement compel a journey—rife with mistakes we all know well—towards a found, motley of mothers and lovers. Róisín’s imagination ruptures narratives about the aftermath of trauma. We are not left scarred, but permanently imprinted with Taylia’s resolute will to find her own way in the world.” Tanaïs, author of Bright Lines