Books like 'The Moonlit Cage' are something quite extraordinary. The book is narrated by Darya, a young Muslim woman from Afghanistan who opens the first pages of the story by talking briefly about how she is considered wicked due to her character and life choices. She leaves the reader with the question, "Am I truly wicked?" before beginning, a question which she asks the reader in the final pages once she has given her life account.
We are taken back in time to when Darya is a child, the scene set, her character clearly understood and her family's troubles vividly explained. The narrative captures perfectly how we are seeing things from the eyes of child Darya, her naivety, stubbornness and curiosity highlighted. As the story progresses, we grow to learn more about the inner mind of Darya, of how it was shaped by her Grandmother's exotic stories of lands far beyond their own and of how she too has the power to do so much more with her life than what is planned.
Leaving the child Darya behind, we then are introduced to the second part of the story where we meet Darya as a young woman. Being married off into a nomad family, she is disregarded and treated badly by her husband whilst suppressing who she truly is to be someone who she is expected to be. In a sudden turn of events, Darya's life becomes endangered. Finally giving in to her urge to survive and live, she runs away from the only life she has ever known.
Starving and filthy from hiding in the woods for days, Darya once again musters the courage and begs a young man for help. Much to her surprise, he obliges and helps her on a journey towards lands unknown, far away from her home and her family. The true nature of this man gradually becomes clearer and strangely, Darya soon feels a certain kinship with him, something that progresses into something else over time...but that in itself brings about a new challenge and heart ache which Darya never expected to experience.
Whilst reading Darya's story, there is a lot of in depth research which the writer has clearly done in order to capture the likeness of Afghanistan in the 1850's. A lot of the inequality between men and women, the treatment of women in general and the role that each person plays in a marriage is explained clearly through Darya. The social standings between various races and types of people is also described clearly via Darya. Although she obliges by the rules as she is expected to, there is a rebellious side to her which questions the world she has been brought up in and this is the side of her which gives her the power to change her fate.
I thought the beginning was quite intense as the reader is immediately thrown into this world where women are treated like they are worthless and some parts were difficult to read due to the vivid way in which they had been described, but over all, the entire story I found was both incredibly moving and very inspiring. Darya is such a colourful and interesting character, her story makes you turn pages rapidly. Highly recommend it to those of you who enjoyed reading books such as 'The Kite Runner' and 'A Thousand Splendid Suns'.