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Shabanu, Daughter of the Wind

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69:; she enjoys tending to the animals and especially teaching tricks to her beloved camels, Mithoo and Xhush Dil and Guluband, a camel her father had recently sold against her will. Before Phulan's wedding, however, disaster strikes: Shabanu and Phulan accidentally stumble upon several strange men in the desert, among them an old, wicked landowner named Nazir Mohammad, who was known to have murdered Shabanu's cousin, Lal Khan, in the past. Nazir notices Phulan while hunting quail with his brother and nephew. He decides that Phulan will be the prize for whoever bags the most quail. When Shabanu tells her father, he is enraged and goes to tell Nazir that Phulan is betrothed and that Nazir does not have legal ownership of her. Out of anger, Nazir later murders Hamir, whom Phulan was to marry. Phulan has to marry Hamir's brother, Murad, instead, a decision she doesn't oppose, much to Shabanu's anger. When Shabanu learns that she must marry Nazir's brother, Rahim- 64:
breeders. Shabanu is on the brink of womanhood; her older sister Phulan is already marriageable, and soon will be married to Hamir, a cousin of their family's. Shabanu is also betrothed to Hamir's brother, Murad. At twelve years old, Shabanu is not interested in
73:, an old man who already has three wives, to save her family and her sister's new marriage, she must make a choice between running away, or staying to let her family have their way, which in her eye she thinks is akin to sacrificing her. 182:
has also received a number of criticisms for not being up-to-date on Islamic marital customs. Many Muslims feel that the novel reflects badly on their culture, as the information covered is no longer current and not up to date.
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Shabanu lives in the Cholistan Desert in Pakistan, where they play games near the border of India. She is the second daughter of a peaceful, loving family of
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has received mainly negative reviews from critics, being criticized for the at times shallow plot and under-developed characters.
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shows Shabanu as a mother at age 18 and her ups and downs of her new life at home, her marriage, her daughter, and her life.
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follows the life, hardships, decisions, and events that occur in the life of Mumtaz, Shabanu's daughter.
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Sharma - A female cousin of mama and dadi who was known for illegally leaving her abusive husband
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Murad - Shabanu's cousin; Shabanu's husband-to-be, but who later marries Phulan instead
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Hamir - Shabanu's cousin; Phulan's husband-to-be, but was murdered by Nazir Mohammad
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Phulan – Shabanu's older sister who later takes Murad away from her as her husband.
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Stories Matter: The Complexity of Cultural Authenticity in Children's Literature
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Shabanu – an eleven-year-old girl living in the Cholistan Desert with her family
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and centers on the story of her coming-of-age. It is succeeded by the novels
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Cai, Mingshui (2003). Dana L. Fox; Kathy G. Short (eds.).
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Dalil Abbasi (Dadi) – Shabanu's father, a camel breeder
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Grandfather - Shabanu's grandfather and Dadi's father
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Nazir-Mohammad - wicked landowner who murders Hamir
36:. It is narrated by a young girl who lives in the 223: 128:In 1993, Suzanne Fisher published a sequel to 170: 94:Auntie – the sister-in-law of Dalil Abbasi 158: 14: 224: 199: 24: 76: 25: 273: 145:In the recent installment of the 257:Children's books set in Pakistan 262:Children's books set in deserts 55: 193: 13: 1: 186: 180:Shabanu: Daughter of the Wind 130:Shabanu: Daughter of the Wind 29:Shabanu: Daughter of the Wind 7: 242:Newbery Honor-winning works 10: 278: 237:American children's novels 100:Fatima - Sharma's daughter 123: 171:Reception and criticism 88:Mama – Shabanu's mother 247:Novels set in Pakistan 159:Awards and nominations 34:Suzanne Fisher Staples 252:1989 children's books 232:1989 American novels 32:is a 1989 novel by 152:The House of Djinn 49:The House of Djinn 16:(Redirected from 269: 216: 215: 197: 38:Cholistan Desert 21: 277: 276: 272: 271: 270: 268: 267: 266: 222: 221: 220: 219: 212: 198: 194: 189: 173: 161: 126: 79: 77:Main characters 58: 23: 22: 15: 12: 11: 5: 275: 265: 264: 259: 254: 249: 244: 239: 234: 218: 217: 210: 191: 190: 188: 185: 172: 169: 160: 157: 125: 122: 121: 120: 113: 110: 107: 104: 101: 98: 95: 92: 89: 86: 83: 78: 75: 57: 54: 9: 6: 4: 3: 2: 274: 263: 260: 258: 255: 253: 250: 248: 245: 243: 240: 238: 235: 233: 230: 229: 227: 213: 211:0-8141-4744-5 207: 203: 196: 192: 184: 181: 177: 168: 166: 165:Newbery Honor 156: 154: 153: 148: 143: 141: 137: 136: 131: 118: 114: 111: 108: 105: 102: 99: 96: 93: 90: 87: 84: 81: 80: 74: 72: 68: 63: 53: 51: 50: 45: 44: 39: 35: 31: 30: 19: 201: 195: 179: 175: 174: 163:Awarded the 162: 150: 146: 144: 139: 133: 129: 127: 116: 70: 59: 56:Plot summary 47: 41: 28: 27: 26: 226:Categories 187:References 167:in 1990. 149:series, 67:marriage 176:Shabanu 147:Shabanu 18:Shabanu 208:  140:Haveli 135:Haveli 124:Sequel 115:Rahim- 43:Haveli 117:sahib 71:sahib 62:camel 206:ISBN 46:and 228:: 138:. 132:, 214:. 20:)

Index

Shabanu
Suzanne Fisher Staples
Cholistan Desert
Haveli
The House of Djinn
camel
marriage
Haveli
The House of Djinn
Newbery Honor
ISBN
0-8141-4744-5
Categories
1989 American novels
American children's novels
Newbery Honor-winning works
Novels set in Pakistan
1989 children's books
Children's books set in Pakistan
Children's books set in deserts

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