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Mongolia, anyone?
By Andrea , Slow but steady · 5 posts · 14 views
By Andrea , Slow but steady · 5 posts · 14 views
last updated Mar 01, 2019 03:23PM
Tibet recommendations
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By Andrea , Slow but steady · 5 posts · 15 views
last updated Aug 13, 2018 06:14AM
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What Members Thought

This was a five-star book for me because I could not put this book down, except for having to feed my dog. Although some people might feel this was contrived, I believe it was quite true to life based on what I have read before. Women did not really have rights and were treated as second class citizens in many cases, and many were beaten by their husbands. At the same time, they needed the "protection" of men.
I learned a lot from this book. It infuriated me re the actions of men toward women bec ...more
I learned a lot from this book. It infuriated me re the actions of men toward women bec ...more

Sep 08, 2012
Joy
rated it
it was amazing
·
review of another edition
Shelves:
around-the-world-in-80-books
“One could not count the moons that shimmer on her roofs,
Or the thousand splendid suns that hide behind her walls.”
I wish I could capture of the beauty of this book with a book review. When I read The Kite Runner earlier this year, my heart was captivated for the people & culture of Afghanistan. That love was only compounded after reading A Thousand Splendid Suns. This story follows 3 generations of women, from Soviet occupation to the Taliban, and the love & loss they experienced. I don't even ...more
Or the thousand splendid suns that hide behind her walls.”
I wish I could capture of the beauty of this book with a book review. When I read The Kite Runner earlier this year, my heart was captivated for the people & culture of Afghanistan. That love was only compounded after reading A Thousand Splendid Suns. This story follows 3 generations of women, from Soviet occupation to the Taliban, and the love & loss they experienced. I don't even ...more

Plot-driven story, easy to follow while cooking and baking (I was listening to this one as an audio book). I've even shed a tear or two and I might have learned a little bit about Afghan history.
Unfortunately, the chararcters were one-dimensional and thus, neither very believable nor very engrossing. The good are too good to be true and the evil - well, they're super-evil, up to the point that even their off-spring becomes kind of evil (well, until the good guy gets in charge - there might be s ...more
Unfortunately, the chararcters were one-dimensional and thus, neither very believable nor very engrossing. The good are too good to be true and the evil - well, they're super-evil, up to the point that even their off-spring becomes kind of evil (well, until the good guy gets in charge - there might be s ...more

This book was truly heart rending, but well-written and an excellent read. It gives a wonderful overview of what life has been like in Afghanistan for the past few decades. It shows how life was for the civilians, the people of the country. The historical aspects were good as well and increased my knowledge of the situation in this country and how things have come to pass. I identified with the characters and it was definitely a tear jerker.

Jan 27, 2010
Gergana Atanasova
rated it
it was ok
·
review of another edition
Shelves:
2009,
knigi-vremeto-org

Feb 22, 2010
Karen
rated it
it was amazing
·
review of another edition
Shelves:
52-books-in-2010-challenge