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First Comes Marriage

My Not-So-Typical American Love Story

ebook
2 of 2 copies available
2 of 2 copies available

A candid, heartfelt love story set in contemporary California that challenges the idea of what it means to be American, liberated, and in love. When Huda meets Hadi, the boy she will ultimately marry, she is six years old. Both are the American-born children of Iraqi immigrants, who grew up on opposite ends of California. Hadi considers Huda his childhood sweetheart, the first and only girl he's ever loved, but Huda needs proof that she is more than just the girl Hadi's mother has chosen for her son. She wants what many other American girls have—the entertainment culture's almost singular tale of chance meetings, defying the odds, and falling in love. She wants stolen kisses, romantic dates, and a surprise proposal. As long as she has a grand love story, Huda believes no one will question if her marriage has been arranged. But when Huda and Hadi's conservative Muslim families forbid them to go out alone before their wedding, Huda must navigate her way through the despair of unmet expectations and dashed happily-ever-after ideals. Eventually she comes to understand the toll of straddling two cultures in a marriage and the importance of reconciling what you dreamed of with the life you eventually live. Tender, honest and irresistibly compelling, First Comes Marriage is the first Muslim-American memoir dedicated to the themes of love and sexuality. Huda and Hadi's story brilliantly circles around a series of firsts, chronicling two virgins moving through their first everything: first hand holding, first kiss, and first sexual encounter. First Comes Marriage is an almost unbearably humanizing tale that tucks into our hearts and lingers in our imagination, while also challenging long-standing taboos within the Muslim community and the romantic stereotypes we unknowingly carry within us that sabotage some of our best chances for finding true love.

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    • Booklist

      October 15, 2018
      Al-Marashi's debut memoir recounts her engagement and the early years of her marriage to Hadi, a fellow Iraqi American member of the Shia sect of Muslims. Before marriage, Al-Marashi believed that a traditional, family-sanctioned union to a boy from her same background would lay the foundation for a happy life. She also held the romantic, impractical, Americanized belief that rings and proposals and wedding-day highs laid the foundation for a loving marriage. Her lived experience, however, requires Al-Marashi to unlearn both of sets of beliefs. For years, she struggles to jettison her marriage angst. Hadi was accepted to exactly one medical school, forcing Al-Marashi to move to Mexico; suspend her own graduate work; and struggle to fill large blocks of empty, lonely time. Soon the pair has the resentment-laced Mexico fight with regularity. By exposing a long list of what she got wrong, including her beliefs about sex and the idea that her husband is an extension of herself rather than his own person, Al-Marashi finally gets to what's right.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2018, American Library Association.)

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  • English

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