Sonita: My Fight Against Tyranny and My Escape to Freedom

Nearly 15 million girls, including many in the U.S., are forced into marriage each year. Each of these girls has a price tag-and a story. Sonita Alizada was almost sold twice. Her price tag was $9,000. The money her family received for selling her would pay for her brother's wife.

The first time Sonita was put up for sale, she was 10 years old and she thought that she was participating in a dress-up game. She quickly realized that, in her culture, a wedding is a kind of funeral for the bride. Sonita says, “It represents the loss of a future. The loss of a voice.” After the marriage fell through, she was placed on sale again. She was expected to form a family, sleep with a man she never met, and then repeat the terrible cycle with her own children. But Sonita wanted more.

In Sonita, the Afghan rap artist and activist shares the story of how she fled Afghanistan to pursue her dreams and evolved into a woman who is changing the world. She shares incredible highs, like winning the song writing contest that gave her the opportunity of a lifetime, and unimaginable lows, like when the cruel Taliban regained control of Afghanistan, and how some of her family escaped, and how some were left behind.

Sonita teaches us to hold onto hope. You were chosen to be part of this world and your dreams have power, too. You can be a difference maker. This book is more than Sonita's story. It is a love letter for anyone who has ever dreamed of more and held onto hope that their story would be different than the ones that came before them.

1146996642
Sonita: My Fight Against Tyranny and My Escape to Freedom

Nearly 15 million girls, including many in the U.S., are forced into marriage each year. Each of these girls has a price tag-and a story. Sonita Alizada was almost sold twice. Her price tag was $9,000. The money her family received for selling her would pay for her brother's wife.

The first time Sonita was put up for sale, she was 10 years old and she thought that she was participating in a dress-up game. She quickly realized that, in her culture, a wedding is a kind of funeral for the bride. Sonita says, “It represents the loss of a future. The loss of a voice.” After the marriage fell through, she was placed on sale again. She was expected to form a family, sleep with a man she never met, and then repeat the terrible cycle with her own children. But Sonita wanted more.

In Sonita, the Afghan rap artist and activist shares the story of how she fled Afghanistan to pursue her dreams and evolved into a woman who is changing the world. She shares incredible highs, like winning the song writing contest that gave her the opportunity of a lifetime, and unimaginable lows, like when the cruel Taliban regained control of Afghanistan, and how some of her family escaped, and how some were left behind.

Sonita teaches us to hold onto hope. You were chosen to be part of this world and your dreams have power, too. You can be a difference maker. This book is more than Sonita's story. It is a love letter for anyone who has ever dreamed of more and held onto hope that their story would be different than the ones that came before them.

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Sonita: My Fight Against Tyranny and My Escape to Freedom

Sonita: My Fight Against Tyranny and My Escape to Freedom

by Sonita Alizada

Narrated by Vaneh Assadourian

Unabridged — 8 hours, 6 minutes

Sonita: My Fight Against Tyranny and My Escape to Freedom

Sonita: My Fight Against Tyranny and My Escape to Freedom

by Sonita Alizada

Narrated by Vaneh Assadourian

Unabridged — 8 hours, 6 minutes

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Overview

Nearly 15 million girls, including many in the U.S., are forced into marriage each year. Each of these girls has a price tag-and a story. Sonita Alizada was almost sold twice. Her price tag was $9,000. The money her family received for selling her would pay for her brother's wife.

The first time Sonita was put up for sale, she was 10 years old and she thought that she was participating in a dress-up game. She quickly realized that, in her culture, a wedding is a kind of funeral for the bride. Sonita says, “It represents the loss of a future. The loss of a voice.” After the marriage fell through, she was placed on sale again. She was expected to form a family, sleep with a man she never met, and then repeat the terrible cycle with her own children. But Sonita wanted more.

In Sonita, the Afghan rap artist and activist shares the story of how she fled Afghanistan to pursue her dreams and evolved into a woman who is changing the world. She shares incredible highs, like winning the song writing contest that gave her the opportunity of a lifetime, and unimaginable lows, like when the cruel Taliban regained control of Afghanistan, and how some of her family escaped, and how some were left behind.

Sonita teaches us to hold onto hope. You were chosen to be part of this world and your dreams have power, too. You can be a difference maker. This book is more than Sonita's story. It is a love letter for anyone who has ever dreamed of more and held onto hope that their story would be different than the ones that came before them.


Editorial Reviews

From the Publisher

Sonita Alizada's remarkable journey, beautifully captured in her upcoming book, is a testament to resilience and optimism. Her story inspires courage and hope, reminding us of the power of the human spirit."
Hillary Rodham Clinton

“This story is a source of inspiration for young people.”
Kerry Kennedy, President, Robert F. Kennedy Human Rights

“Her buoyant voice lends her difficult life story a sense of lightness, optimism, and hope. The memoir’s clean narrative arc reveals Sonita’s talent not only as a lyricist, but as a writer of prose. An uplifting and bighearted memoir from Afghanistan’s most famous female rapper.” — Kirkus Reviews

“Alizada’s straightforward prose effectively conveys her loss of innocence as she comes to understand the burdens placed on women…..this inspires.” — Publishers Weekly

“Over the last decade, Alizada has given much of herself to the world as an activist. Now, on her own terms, she shares her story and all that she sacrificed and gained by continuing to write it, honoring her family throughout its pages.” — Booklist

Kirkus Reviews

2025-05-02
A rapper and an activist from Afghanistan tells her life story.

Growing up in Herat, Afghanistan, under Taliban rule, Alizada leads a circumscribed life. A war rages through the country, limiting her family’s mobility. No one in her household can read or write, limiting their exposure to the world beyond their country. It is only when the family flees to Iran with the help of a smuggler that Sonita’s world begins to expand. Despite her mother’s conviction that education is “a waste of time and money,” Sonita sneaks out of the house and attempts to enroll in an Iranian school where the watchman turns her away, saying, “Afghanis aren’t allowed here.” Years later, after her family briefly moves back to Afghanistan, Sonita’s father dies, and the family eventually returns to Iran, Sonita finally finds a school that serves Afghani children. Although Sonita’s school supports her, her family does not: She must hide her movements to avoid her brothers’ violent threats. At school, Sonita’s talent for writing rap music inspires a filmmaker to make her the star of a documentary, helping her with an opportunity to attend a boarding school in Utah. Sonita leaves Iran without telling her family, risking their relationship. During the years it takes to reconcile, Sonita becomes a viral sensation and a vocal advocate for ending child marriage around the world. Her buoyant voice lends her difficult life story a sense of lightness, optimism, and hope. The memoir’s clean narrative arc reveals Sonita’s talent not only as a lyricist, but as a writer of prose.

An uplifting and bighearted memoir from Afghanistan’s most famous female rapper.

Product Details

BN ID: 2940193737612
Publisher: HarperCollins
Publication date: 07/08/2025
Edition description: Unabridged
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