Author Guide · Lisanne Swart
Books Written by Malala Yousafzai
Malala Yousafzai was fifteen when a Taliban gunman boarded her school bus in Pakistan’s Swat Valley and shot her in the head. She survived. What happened next — the global attention, the Nobel Peace Prize at seventeen, the Oxford education, the marriage, the gradual, difficult process of becoming a private person again inside a public life — is what her books are about. The shooting is the beginning of the story, not the whole of it. Malala has written six books, from her landmark memoir to children’s picture books to a new memoir published in 2025 about everything that came after. This list is all of the Malala Yousafzai books in order.
By Lisanne Swart · 6 books · Memoir · Activism · Children’s · Updated May 2026
I Am Malala: The Story of the Girl Who Stood Up for Education and Was Shot by the Taliban
Written with journalist Christina Lamb, this is Malala’s account of her childhood in the Swat Valley — her father’s school, the gradual Taliban takeover of the region, her own public advocacy for girls’ education, the shooting in October 2012, and the months of recovery in Birmingham. The book moves between her personal history and the broader political story of how the Taliban came to control Swat, and it does not simplify either. Malala was sixteen when it was published. It was an immediate international bestseller and helped establish the Malala Fund.
I have this on my shelf and it is the one I return to. What makes it more than a survivor story is its specificity: Malala writes about what she actually wanted — to go to school, to read, to be taken seriously — and the simplicity of that desire, set against the violence it provoked, is more powerful than any argument she could have made. The chapters on her father, Ziauddin, are particularly good. He is as much the subject of the book as she is.
I Am Malala: How One Girl Stood Up for Education and Changed the World (Young Readers Edition)
An adaptation of the original memoir for younger readers, co-written with Patricia McCormick. The core story — Malala’s childhood in Swat, the Taliban, the shooting, the recovery — is retained but condensed and reframed for a middle-grade audience. Some of the political complexity of the original is simplified; the personal story is brought more to the foreground. It is aimed at readers aged ten and up and is widely used in school curricula.
Worth being clear about what this is and isn’t: it is not a new book, it is a reframing of the original for a different audience. Adults who have not read I Am Malala should read the original. For younger readers, or for teachers looking for a version they can use in the classroom, this edition does what it is designed to do well. The essential argument — that education is a right, not a privilege, and that it is worth fighting for — loses nothing in the adaptation.
Malala’s Magic Pencil
A picture book for young children, illustrated by the French artist duo Kerascoët. As a child in Pakistan, Malala wished for a magic pencil — she would use it to redraw reality: to give her family gifts, to erase the rubbish dump near her house, to sleep an extra hour in the morning. The book follows that wish as it transforms into something bigger: the understanding that words and education are the real magic pencil, and that they belong to everyone. It was nominated for the Goodreads Choice Award for Best Picture Book in 2017.
Beautifully illustrated and genuinely moving in the way that the best children’s books are — by treating children as capable of understanding something real. The magic pencil metaphor does something that adult writing sometimes can’t: it makes the argument for education feel personal and immediate rather than political. Worth reading with children and worth reading alone.
We Are Displaced: My Journey and Stories from Refugee Girls Around the World
Part memoir, part anthology. Malala begins by writing about her own experience of displacement — first as an internally displaced person in Pakistan during the Taliban years, then as someone forced to rebuild her life in Birmingham. She then shares the stories of nine other displaced girls she met through her advocacy work, from Syria, South Sudan, the Democratic Republic of Congo, and elsewhere. The book is aimed at young adults but reads without condescension for any age.
What this book does that I Am Malala can’t is expand the frame. Malala’s story is extraordinary but it is one story. We Are Displaced shows the shape of a global crisis through specific faces — girls with names and histories and interrupted futures — and refuses to let the statistics stand in for the people. It is the most political of her books in the sense that it is asking the reader to act, not just to feel. That quality makes it more demanding and, in some ways, more important.
My Name Is Malala
A board book for the youngest readers — toddlers and pre-readers — in which Malala introduces herself and her story in the simplest possible terms. The book is designed to inspire very young children with the idea that their voice matters and that education is something worth wanting. Illustrated by Shirin Adl with bright, accessible artwork. It is the most distilled version of Malala’s core message: I have a name, a voice, and a right to learn.
Board books are not typically reviewed with the same seriousness as adult memoirs, but this one earns its place in the sequence of Malala’s work. The progression from I Am Malala to Malala’s Magic Pencil to My Name Is Malala shows a deliberate effort to reach readers at every stage of life with the same argument. The youngest version is the simplest and in some ways the most direct: you exist, you matter, you can read.
Finding My Way: A Memoir
Published in October 2025 and an instant New York Times bestseller, Finding My Way picks up where I Am Malala left off — after the shooting, after the Nobel Prize, inside the years that the public story didn’t cover. Oxford University with a security detail. Failing exams. Being a high school loner in Birmingham. Falling in love. Navigating PTSD without a public language for it. Trying on jeans for the first time. The book is deliberately personal and deliberately small in scale — a corrective to the symbol. Malala writes about trying to be ordinary while being globally famous, and about slowly reclaiming her own story from the icon it had become.
This is the book that changes the picture of who Malala actually is. I Am Malala is about courage under extraordinary pressure. Finding My Way is about everything that comes after courage — the confusion, the anxiety, the slow construction of an adult self from the wreckage of a childhood interrupted by global attention. The New York Times called it “a remarkably intimate and insistently human chronicle.” That is exactly right. Read I Am Malala first. Then read this.
Where to start with Malala Yousafzai
If you have never read her
→ Start with I Am Malala. It is the book that established her voice and it remains the most complete account of her story, her family, and the political situation that made her story possible. I have it on my shelf and it is the one I recommend first.
If you want the full arc — who she was before the world knew her name, and who she has become since
→ Read I Am Malala then Finding My Way in order. The two books together cover her life from childhood in Swat to young adulthood in Oxford, and the contrast between them — the public courage of the first, the private difficulty of the second — is where the real portrait emerges.
If you are reading with children or teaching
→ Malala’s Magic Pencil for young children, the Young Readers Edition of I Am Malala for middle-grade readers. Both preserve the essential argument without losing what makes it matter.
If the displacement and refugee angle resonates — the global crisis behind the individual story
→ We Are Displaced, and then my books about women in war reading list for what to read alongside it.
If it is the memoir quality that draws you — honest, personal, refusing to perform resilience
→ My best memoirs and biographies list has the natural next reads. Also: Educated by Tara Westover — a very different context but the same quality of honest reckoning with a childhood that shaped everything and had to be survived before it could be understood.
If the resilience theme is what stays with you
→ My books about resilience list and books like Man’s Search for Meaning both go deeper into that territory.
Frequently asked questions about Malala Yousafzai’s books
From the bookshelf
“One child, one teacher, one book, and one pen can change the world.” — Malala Yousafzai
More books that refuse to look away on my personal bookshelf — hand-picked for readers who want books that stay with them long after the last page.
Browse the full bookshelf Get book recommendations