I found the theme of the story in this book challenging and thought provoking - especially the fact that you shouldn't judge people by how they look but by how they behave.However, I found the writing style annoying, especially at the beginning, and this made the book difficult for me to get really into for some time - it was the story that kept me going. Interesting for me as well is the fact that this is set in Wolverhampton where I currently live. I did find the fact that it was written by a white male teacher made me dubious about it before I started.
Beauty—in both name and appearance—is a 20-year-old Bangladeshi, returned to England after having disgraced her family by fleeing an abusive arranged marriage. Forced onto the job-hunter’s treadmill and under extreme domestic pressure, she cracks and runs away. She has been told by her family for years that she is stupid and has not learned to read by the time they took her out of school when she was 14. I find it a sad indictment on our education system that I can well believe this and also that it takes a fellow late learner in reading to make her realise she can read because he teaches her in a way that makes sense to her.
Her encounters with officialdom (again unfortunately too believable from tales I have heard), fellow claimants, and strangers in the city streets, complicated by the restrictions and comfort of her language and culture, place her at the mercy of such unlikely helpers as Mark, a friendly, Staffordshire bull terrier-breeding ex-offender, and Peter, a middle-class underachiever on the rebound from a bitter relationship. With determination and good humor, Beauty moves ever closer to making her choice between family duty and personal freedom. All the while, however, her brothers are searching for her across town. Can she make the choice herself, before she’s forced to?
Despite my concerns I am pleased that I made it to the end and would recommend the book to others