Wild Crossings by Ip, Rachel
£14.99Author: Ip, Rachel
For National Curriculum Key Stage 2
Published on 24 April 2025 by Hachette Children’s Group (Hodder Children’s Books) in the United Kingdom.
Hardback | 48 pages
246 x 307 x 11 | 534g
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Hardback | 48 pages
246 x 307 x 11 | 534g

Paperback | 32 pages
250 x 275 x 5 | 220g

Paperback | 400 pages, 1 x 8 page colour inset
129 x 197 x 24 | 310g

Paperback | 384 pages
197 x 130 x 28 | 292g

Paperback | 400 pages
137 x 199 x 31 | 278g

Paperback | 288 pages
197 x 130 x 22 | 238g

Paperback | 320 pages
128 x 198 x 27 | 226g

Paperback | 272 pages
128 x 198 x 21 | 238g

Hardback | 256 pages
216 x 135 | 0g

Paperback | 416 pages
129 x 199 x 29 | 298g

Paperback | 32 pages, Full Colour
260 x 260 | 0g

Paperback | 480 pages
198 x 130 | 0g

Hardback | 208 pages, Approx. 200 colour illustrations
158 x 218 x 23 | 560g

Hardback | 168 pages, 40 full-colour illustrations
184 x 134 x 20 | 332g

A masterful, must-read contribution to conversations on power, justice, healing, and devotion from a singular voice I now trust with my whole heart’GLENNON DOYLE, author of Untamed**Roxane Gay’s Book Club March 2023 Pick**When Lamya is fourteen, she decides to disappear. It seems easier to ease herself out of sight than to grapple with the difficulty of taking shape in a world that doesn’t fit. She is a queer teenager growing up in a Muslim household, a South Asian in a Middle Eastern country.
But during her Quran class, she reads a passage about Maryam, and suddenly everything shifts: if Maryam was never touched by any man, could Maryam be… like Lamya?Written with deep intelligence and a fierce humour, Hijab Butch Blues follows Lamya as she travels to the United States, as she comes out, and as she navigates the complexities of the immigration system – and the queer dating scene. At each step, she turns to her faith to make sense of her life, weaving stories from the Quran together with her own experiences: Musa leading his people to freedom; Allah, who is neither male nor female; and Nuh, who built an ark, just as Lamya is finally able to become the architect of her own story.
Raw and unflinching, Hijab Butch Blues heralds the arrival of a truly original voice, asking powerful questions about gender and sexuality, relationships, identity and faith, and what it means to build a life of one’s own.