A Thousand Splendid Suns
I'm still reeling from reading this book, Kahled Hosseini's A Thousand Splendid Suns. Having loved his first book, The Kite Runner, I was excited to hear that he had written another. This second story chronicles the lives of two women living in Afghanistan from the 1970's to the present time. Part of the power of the story comes from the fact that it takes place precisely during my lifetime, covering all the global news I lived through - the cold war, the fall of the Soviet Union, 9-11, the American attacks - but from a vastly different perspective. I couldn't help but be aware that this could have been my life, had I been born there instead. Hosseini weaves an excellent story, my favorite kind of story. Even as I am captured by the women's lives as they unfold, I am gaining perspective, understanding, of cultures far different from my own, historical and current events told from a viewpoint I cannot have, and the history of Afghanistan told from her own memories, not from America's media images. This last point is so important to us, I believe. I remember so clearly the day American forces invaded Kabul. I remember going to a map of the world, placing my hands on the country of Afghanistan and feeling grief, so much grief, for the life-wrenching stories of loss and war and grief that were being written that day, unknown to me. In this story, I learn to imagine not only what these stories may have been, but something of the world they took place in, and the history that led up to them.

















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