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by Khaled Hosseini
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by
Khaled Hosseini
published
2007
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isbn
(isbn13: 9789023426066)





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Lucy
01/27/08

Read in January, 2008
For the last two months I have been putting off reading this book. For starters, I bought the book at an airport in Taiwan, which meant it didn't have a due date which meant it took a backseat to many books that I didn't have the luxury of reading whenever.

Additionally, because I've heard so much about this book already, I almost didn't want to read it at all. I've heard that it's depressing, that it's not as good as The Kite Runner, and that it's basically a novel about the brutal treatment...more
Like this review?   yes   (82 people liked it)
  10 comments

Don
09/16/07

Read in August, 2007
Suns is part historical fiction, part social commentary and part kick-in-the-throat storytelling. A friend of mine said that Suns is a metaphor for Afghanistan but I found it illustrative of Afghanistan's weary and violent history; I found it brutally educational. When I had studied in Germany in 1987, I lived in an international dormitory. I asked my neighbor, Hyder, where he was from, he leaned in to me with a devilish grin and hissed “Afghanistan!” While others found this amusing, the...more
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Rachel
05/30/08

Has a copy to sell/swap — Read in March, 2008
recommended to Rachel by: middle class liberal white woman
recommends it for: middle class liberal white women
This review has been hidden because it contains spoilers. To view it, click here.
Like this review?   yes   (8 people liked it)
  2 comments

Erie
06/11/08

bookshelves: fiksi
Read in February, 2008
The story sets in a "war zone" Afghanistan which is Hosseini does his good job provides me with a glimpse of the history of Afghanistan. Although I feel the story moves slowly in the 1st and 2nd part of the book. The story is really flowing for me when Mariam and Laila lives become intertwined. From this point this book simply unputdownable. Mariam and Laila forged an alliance and harboring resentment against a violent and brutal Rasheed whose happen to be their husband (I really want ...more
Like this review?   yes   (8 people liked it)
  20 comments

Janeciab
Read in January, 2007
My review from the Los Angeles Times Book Review:

Afghani-born novelist Khaled Hosseini enthralled readers with “The Kite Flyer,” his first novel, which was constructed around the friendship between Amir, a privileged Pashtun Sunni born in Kabul, and his boyhood friend and servant Hassan, a Shi’a, ethnic Hazara and master kite runner who, in the course of running to ground the coveted last fallen kite of the winter tournament in 1975, has a violent encounter that changes both boys’ l...more
Like this review?   yes   (8 people liked it)
  3 comments

Anu
01/27/08

Read in March, 2008
August 2007

I was riding in a cab in Bombay recently, and a bookseller on foot approached me at a traffic light with a stack of books. I did my best not to look at the boy, but I couldn't help it. He was waving several books in my face and something caught my eye. I thought my glance was discreet, but he saw me look.. and it was game over. The light turned green right then and the boy starts running with the cab yelling 'Memsahib! Memsahib!'. We're picking up speed.. I'm so scared he's going ...more
Like this review?   yes   (8 people liked it)
  5 comments

jennygel
bookshelves: favourites, pocket-books--for-bathtub-reading-
Read in June, 2007
recommends it for: everyone
I must admit that I had some trepidation in starting this novel, along with hope and excitement.

Hosseini's first book, "The Kite Runner" is quite truthfully, one of the best novels I have ever had the pleasure of reading and I can state most elatedly that "A Thousand Splendid Suns" will take it's place amongst those stories that I cherish. I was apprehensive in starting this book simply because I was worried that I would be disappointed; that it would not be clearly as...more
Like this review?   yes   (7 people liked it)
  1 comments

Tom
03/29/08

Book Review

A Thousand Splendid Suns
By Khaled Hosseini

Reviewed by Tom Carrico

It’s amazing that this author has the #1 fiction paperback (The Kite Runner) and the #1 fiction hardback (A Thousand Splendid Suns) on “The New York Times” bestseller list. The Kite Runner has sold over four millions copies since its release in 2003. It is a hauntingly written novel set in war-torn Afghanistan. It is exceptionally well plotted and opens the window on a part of the world that very f...more
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Beth
04/15/08

Read in April, 2008
Seems that this book and its predecessor, The Kite Runner, has been getting a lot of buzz on the Internet lately — but based on the reviews, I’d shied away from reading either. Most people seemed to agree that these stories of Afghan civil war were “hard” to read — not because of lengthy, erudite descriptions (quite to the contrary, actually; Splendid Suns, at least, was basically well-written with plenty of dialogue to drive the reader through the storyline) but because of the topic. ...more
Like this review?   yes   (5 people liked it)
  2 comments

Ruth
01/31/08

Read in October, 2007
recommended to Ruth by: Cara
recommends it for: Teens and up
This review has been hidden because it contains spoilers. To view it, click here.
Like this review?   yes   (5 people liked it)
  3 comments

Gana
10/11/07

Read in January, 2007
I was disappointed with the quality of this novel after reading his first brilliant novel "Kite Runner". For sure, the story is tragic, painful and unusual for many people, but I don't see the beauty of a novel here; Khaled Hosseini does not sufficiently open internal worlds of his characters; there are not enough descriptions of senses, feelings, thoughts, perceptions and judgments of characters. Events move forcefully and fast: Mariam marries to older man ...she was scared and shudde...more
Like this review?   yes   (5 people liked it)
  8 comments

Eastofoz
recommends it for: Readers looking for a highly emotional soul-ripping read
Another exceptional book by Hosseini. It’ll rip out your heart, have you crying buckets and buckets of tears while marveling at the triumph of the human spirit through severe and virtually unimaginable adversity as well as pure hell.

The writing is absolutely beautiful. The pictures he paints with his words are so vivid that everything from the fun everyday life to the squalor that war brings to the ordinary person just flashes before your eyes like a movie. There are some parts that ha...more
Like this review?   yes   (4 people liked it)
  2 comments

Corbin
04/14/08

bookshelves: fiction
Read in April, 2008
Afghanistan: this crossroads between the East & the West has been crippled by a continuous civil war beginning in the late 1970's. Since then, the ongoing war has caused considerable changes and for all the residents--especially the women in the capital Kabul where much of the violence has taken place.

I looked forward to seeing the changes the female characters were forced into when the Taliban became a stronger politico-religious force in the Islamic Republic of Afghanistan, where in ...more
Like this review?   yes   (4 people liked it)
  3 comments

Jill
08/05/07

bookshelves: 2007reads
Read in July, 2007
Call me a sheep, but I loved this book. I loved the title, the story, the setting, the characters, and the consistency (consistency being something his first book seemed to lack).

The title is taken from a Persian poem by Saeb-e-Tabizi:

KABUL
(Translated by Dr. Josephine Davis)

Ah! How beautiful is Kabul encircled by her arid mountains
And Rose, of the trails of thorns she envies
Her gusts of powdered soil, slightly sting my eyes
But I love her, for knowing and loving are born of t...more
Like this review?   yes   (4 people liked it)
  2 comments

Khaya
09/14/08

bookshelves: intense-sad, islamicwomen
recommended to Khaya by: Shelly
recommends it for: People who actually thought "The Kite Runner" was a good book
To my editor:

Khaled here. As I was reviewing my final draft of “A Thousand Splendid Suns,” some questions occurred to me.

1. Could I make the characters any less complex? Despite my efforts, I feel I haven’t fully achieved the one-dimensionality my readers seemed to love in “The Kite Runner.” Specifically, I’m afraid I may have given Rassan one or two potentially sympathetic moments early on despite his overall abusive personality (although I more than make up for it). I ...more
Like this review?   yes   (3 people liked it)
  16 comments

Milan/zzz
bookshelves: 2008
In his bestselling debut The Kite Runner the accent is on the relationship between father and son and friendships between men, in this novel relationship between women is in the focus. Moreover Mr. Hosseini is precisely dedicated this novel “to the women of Afghanistan”.

This is a story of two women against the background of the last forty years in Afghanistan. Two women from completely different milieus but almost equally tragic destiny. Of course this can’t be different considering th...more
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Gita
Gita rated it: 5 of 5 stars5 of 5 stars5 of 5 stars5 of 5 stars5 of 5 stars