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Cover of Good Girl: A Novel

Good Girl: A Novel

by Aria Aber

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THIS IS A RE RELEASE OF THE TRILOGY! ALL 3 PARTS ARE NOW IN ONE BOOK. Brazille English traded in her dreams of having love, kids, and a beautiful home with a white picket fence years ago. However, with the opening of her new nail salon, Polished By Brazille, and an introduction to Omari, one of the most handsome men she has met in a long time, things seem to be changing for the better. Brazille is floating on cloud nine until her best friend betrays her and she begins to receive strange phone calls and life threatening messages. Everyone becomes a suspect as she tries to figure out who is harrassing her and why. What secrets have come back from the past to destroy her? And how will Brazille's new life turn out?

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"It perfectly captured this time in a woman’s life, or this woman’s life. She’s the daughter of an Afghan refugee in Berlin, and she’s ashamed of it. Anyone that has had shame in their lives, especially shame related to your identity, will really identify with this book. There’s a section in it where she really fancies this guy, a very unsuitable guy, and—as we all do—she is trying to be cool, trying to say the right thing, to sit right, eat right, smoke right. It has really unusual sentence structures—the way they start. It’s quite extraordinary, really. So well done. Nila is trying things out, trying to stabilise herself, trying to accommodate all the aspects of herself that fight against one another. It’s not easy to write about that time of life without becoming maudlin and it isn’t that, it has a lot of life in it."
The Best Novels: The 2025 Women's Prize for Fiction · fivebooks.com
"I’ve heard a lot of people raving about Good Girl by Aria Aber, in which 19-year-old Nila—born in Germany to Afghan parents—attends raves, experiments with art, and grapples with her complicated cultural identity. “I knew that I wanted to write a character like her, who is first of all a wayward Afghan woman, and then someone who can shapeshift and code switch, who can go into different rooms and observe them,” Aber has explained . “I was interested in the innocence but also the slipperiness that youth allows you to inhabit, enact and perform, but that’s also often a little dangerous.” (Out now.)"
Notable Novels of Spring 2025 · fivebooks.com