This is the biography of this young Pakistani victim of an attack against him by the Pakistani Taliban who refuse to recognize the girls have the right to go to school, and have wanted to kill her because she had become a symbol. It is also the life of his family and his father was an opponent of the Taliban, who wanted to ensure that the school is right for boys and girls. This is the story of the current Pakistan its mix of modernity and Islamization, not to mention its corruption. It is the intertwining of destinies mingled the father and the daughter, the father of the struggle for a "secular" education against the Taliban and their willingness to teach only the Koran in madrassas for boys. The will of this young girl to want to be an early "politician" and that before the attack she became her and her father a symbol for Western and Pakistani too.
It is a book that can leave us hungry, especially if you buy it for the other title, "I fight for education and I resist the Taliban." one feels the will of the author or the editor we make clear how this little girl was exceptional and intended to do politics. The most interesting character is the father of Malala, who fought for education, against the Taliban and whose commitment is at the origin of attempted murder. It is regrettable style, didactic, rehearsals, and especially the fact that there is no text on Malala theme that we would buy this book, the struggle of a young girl.