I ordered this book with the hopes that it would be the first book of a wonderful series teaching values in an Islamic context. It says that it is book #1 in the Jewels Series and it focuses on cheating. However, the book was published in 2009 and I can’t find any other books in the series. Sadly, I can possibly see why. The book is not great. The illustrations make it so tempting even if all the girls are gorgeous and the illustrations simple, they would seemingly work well with a book aimed at 4 to 8 year olds, and just 24 pages long.
Unfortunately the text is lacking and doesn’t create a story worth reading more than once. The sentences are repetitive. And the same words are used over and over. The first page alone says the word “play” four times in three sentences. It is about 4th grade girls that play, watch cartoons and essentially hold lessons/ book clubs for each other once a week. A lot going on for a book that on the second page says the word “flies” three times in three sentences. Needless to say the repetition makes it hard for a story time selection, and the run on sentences hard for young readers. The first page features a font that is probably about a size 20 and the next page it drops down to one that is about 11, the third page is about a 14 and the trend of the ever-changing font size continues throughout the book.

Example of repetitiveness from Laila and Pesto the Fly
The story idea is a good one at its core. A girl teaches her friends about flies. Then the fly talks about Laila and how she is kind and honest. Then the next sections returns to Laila not being ready for a math test and she is tempted to cheat when Pesto, the fly, distracts her and writes a message for her in glitter. I’m not sure how the glitter stays on the page, but, the message is received by Laila and emphasized by the author sharing a hadith, “He that deceives us is not one of us.” The last page of the book is a bulleted list emphasizing the harms of cheating, and how to overcome the temptation as the girls urge you to join their Cheat Deceit Foundation.
Overall, the book is awkward and doesn’t work for me. There are a lot of better books out there. That being said, if the author wrote another book, I may give her another chance, it isn’t hopeless. It just needs some tweaks. The fly is a silly likeable character, but the group of friends are a monolith and have no individual roles. The message is clear and important, and we need books like this, but alhumdulillah the standards have gone up, way up, and the writing quality isn’t where it needs to be to attract Muslim children or their parents.
Thank you for your honest review. I will take into consideration each and every word. Two other books were written in the series, and then I moved to another writing project. Rania Marwan