While confined to a mental hospital, thirteen-year-old Callie slowly comes to understand some of the reasons behind her self-mutilation, and gradually starts to get better.
This book is replete with Austerian hopelessness, but it's a hopelessness you can believe in. The dread in Invisible is real."—Laurel Maury, The San Francisco Chronicle "Invisible is a book whose value is a function of its riskiness . . .
By speaking out, 'Sultana' risks the wrath of the Saudi establishment and for this reason, she has told her story anonymously through the bestselling author Jean Sasson. This is a real-life story you will never forget.