
It proves difficult at her racially diverse high school, where aligning with a specific group is integral to fitting in, and almost equally so at Syracuse University, where Gharib discovers that her constant exposure to white people in pop culture didn’t prepare her for the clash of living among them-or the pressures (and guilt) of assimilation.


With a Catholic Filipino mother, whom she lives with in Southern California a close-knit extended Filipino family and an Egyptian Muslim father and mother-in-law, whom she visits in the summer after her parents’ divorce, Gharib tries to find a balance between the cultures that are her heritage. This charming graphic memoir riffs on the joys and challenges of developing a unique ethnic identity.
