2025 Reading Challenge discussion

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A Thousand Splendid Suns
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A Thousand Splendid Suns: Part 2 (contains spoilers)
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Mariam and Laila both had hard childhoods, I agree, Karen and Mahsa, but I think Mariam had it worse than Laila. At least Laila had Babi around every day and Tariq and Giti and Hasina to talk to. Of course, after she lost everyone in more or less a year (I think), then she had no one...

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I absolutely agree!Mariam's childhood was worse.And unfortunately the sad childhood led her to another era in which nothing was actually better!

That being said, I loved reading about the relationships between Laila and her father and Tariq. Hakim, who was regarding as so weak by Rasheed, was such a caring father who took care of Laila while Fariba was mentally checked out. Even though it was marred by tragedy, Laila seemed to have had happiness, some degree of freedom, and an education. I am really interested in seeing how Laila and Mariam come together and whether Laila can help Mariam get any of those things for herself.

I didn't pick up at the time that the man with the car outside the house was Jalil - I thought it must have had something to do with Rasheed. Have you kept reading, Alicia? You get some answers further on...!

Just finished Part 3, so I got my answers!

I felt the exact same way! I definitely had Miriam in the back of my mind the entire time reading about Laila. I just finished Part 2 and I love Laila's story so far but keep wondering about Miriam during this time. Reading about the fall of the communist rulers, I also thought about Jalil and what happened to his family... also wondering why he appeared at Miriam's home.
This is such a wonderful book so far. Really looking forward to seeing how the stories connect.


I agree that the beginning of the second part was a bit of a breather from the heartbreak of Mariam's story. However, by the end of this section I was constantly in a state of horror and tears. Mariam, Laila and all the inhabitants of Kabul were in a state of terror due to the warlords. Even though I knew all about this at the time, the vivid descriptions were heart wrenching. Add to that the current state of affairs in Afghanistan and the tragedy multiplies astronomically.

It must have been an awful situation to live in, when just going outside your front door could mean you were the target of a sniper, and there are rockets and grenades going off in nearby streets and even destroying near-by houses! What a terrible burden to live under. It certainly makes any of the things that cause me distress seem very minor indeed...
Books mentioned in this topic
And the Mountains Echoed (other topics)And the Mountains Echoed (other topics)
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