Susan Laidlaw has twenty years experience as a teacher and counselor in schools and clinical settings around the world. She has published articles on parenting and has led workshops for parents and professional educators on a diverse range of topics related to raising and working with third culture children. When she isn't backpacking through Asia or birdwatching around her island home in Honduras, she can be found writing stories. Susan Laidlaw currently resides in Indonesia.
Winner – IODE Violet Downey Book Award
Nominated – Snow Willow Award
Selected – OLA’s Best Bets List for Kids and Teens
Selected – VOYA’s Top Shelf Fiction for Middle School Readers
“Laidlaw, a globetrotting social worker, puts her firsthand
knowledge of faraway lands and cultures to good use in this
exciting tale of a Canadian teen’s encounters with some of the best
and worst features of a radically different society. Emma’s
first-person, present-tense narration is realistic and
compelling”
—VOYA Magazine
“This is an honest and realistic story about being an outsider in
another country (much of it is based on the author's own
experiences)…. Laidlaw does not hold back from depicting some of
the less-attractive aspects of Pakistani life, but she also conveys
a sense of the beauty and wonder of this culture.”
—School Library Journal
“An Infidel in Paradise is a very well-written evocation of both a
tormented teen and the exotic setting she finds herself in … teen
readers will relate to Emma’s struggles and learn much from this
excellent portrayal of culture clash.”
—Quill and Quire
“Laidlaw has created a rich and layered text. Readers see Emma and
her world through multiple lenses: teenager, diplomat, Canadian.
Her descriptions of both the very rich and the very poor
communities of Islamabad are carefully and respectfully drawn.
Seeing this world through the eyes of a teenager gives the reader
the opportunity to explore the differences in a very engaging way….
Highly recommended”
—CM Magazine
“S.J. Laidlaw could have imbued An Infidel in Paradise with the
same resentment that is implied in the scathing indictment of
‘Infidel!’ leveled against Emma but she does not. Instead,
she plays with the idea that the safety of ‘inside,’ whether it be
the compound, one's comfort zone or culture, and the danger of
‘outside’ is not always the case. It has more to do with
perception and broaching that transition with caution in an effort
to make both territories manageable. Even Emma is able to find
herself accepting her new life as An Infidel in Paradise.
—CanLit for Little Canadians
". . . I hope every teen reads this book, and that everyone who
knows a teen reads it. An Infidel in Paradise was a pleasure to
read (even if it did make me cry more than once), and I will
definitely be keeping my eye out for more work by S.J.
Laidlaw."
–About.com
“…Laidlaw, a globetrotting social worker, puts her firsthand
knowledge of faraway lands and cultures to good use in this
exciting tale of a Canadian teen’s encounters with some of the best
and worst features of a radically different society. Emma’s
first-person, present-tense narration is realistic and compelling,
providing entertaining contrasts between her thoughts and her
actions.”
— VOYA
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