
The
International Writers Magazine:
A
Thousand Splendid Suns by Khaled Hosseini
Publisher: Riverhead Books
ISBN: 9781594489501
Jenny Adamthwaite review
A
Thousand Splendid Suns follows the lives of two women born nearly
twenty years apart. Mariam, the illegitimate daughter of a wealthy
businessman and his housekeeper grows up in the countryside near
Herat. Laila, the daughter of liberal, educated parents is brought
up in Kabul.
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Mariams life
is, as her mother predicts, nothing but rejection and heartache
and a series of miserable events eventually brings her to Kabul. Laila,
whose childhood is much happier than Mariams, is brought to her
by tragic events of her own. Their lives tangle together and the women
become, in many ways, each others saviours in a time of intense
sadness and horror.
The characters are absolutely believable. By the end of the book, you
know them intimately and you are as sad not to know them anymore as
you are to have finished the book. Hosseini guides you first through
Mariams early life and then through Lailas before bringing
both women, who by this time you know very well, together. As they react
to each other in the early stages of their relationship you understand
both points of view so well that you ache for both of them. This is
an unusual and powerful way of telling a story. The usual convention
for a story told from different points of view is to alternate between
each character through whom the story is told. Though Hosseini does
this when the characters meet, he first ensures that you understand
who they are completely. Knowing Mariam and Laila and what they have
been through so well makes their unity seem even stronger.
Hosseini has been criticised for describing too explicitly what the
characters are feeling. Though he does directly describe their emotions,
I would argue that this is a valuable approach. Though it is less forgivable
in an omnipotent third person narrative, if you are writing from a characters
point of view, it is difficult (and possibly ill advised) not to describe
their emotions. This, after all, is what they would do if they told
you the story themselves. Furthermore, it is clearly a conscious decision
of the author to take this approach: he does not describe other things
in the same way. There are hundreds of little nuances throughout the
book that tell you nothing and show you everything. For example, there
is a lovely moment where Mariam asks her husband Rasheed what communists
are and he tells her with despairing authority that they believe in
Karl Marxist and will not tell her anything further. This
gives us a wonderful insight into Rasheeds character that passes
Mariam by and we begin to realise how weak he really is beneath his
strength and aggression.
Hosseinis descriptions are startlingly precise, often showing
you what isnt there as much as what is. His expert use of similes
conveys both beauty and sadness to a devastating effect (
leaving her
to look at the frozen stars in the sky and a cloud
that draped the face of the moon like wedding veil). He has a
knack for a good ending and ends each chapter like it is the last: beautiful,
emotional and disarming.
My only reservation with the book is that the last section moves too
quickly. In a sense, this is intentional: it switches from the past
tense to the present tense and the faster pace indicates hope and moving
forward. Unfortunately, the side effect of this is that it suddenly
seems very hurried, as if Hosseini is trying to sum everything up, which
perhaps makes it seem tidier than it needs to. Some of the events in
the last section could be construed as being a bit too convenient; this
may have been avoided if the pace of the book had not speeded up so
much. There is also very minimal attention paid to what happens after
the Taliban lose power in Afghanistan. Although there is an indication
that everything isnt perfect, there is slightly too much of a
happily ever after feel to the ending, albeit tinged with
sadness and regret.
Hosseini paints Afghanistan simultaneously as a horrific, war-torn area
and as the most beautiful city on Earth. He makes a clear distinction
between the place and what is happening in it. As well as increasing
the impact of the story, this leads to a tremendous sympathy for the
people who live there, both fictional and real. I have finished both
of his books with a strong and surprising urge to visit Afghanistan,
which is an amazing feat for two novels that deliberately highlight
the horrific things that have happened there.
© Jenny Adamthwaite 5th January 2008
j_adamthwaite at talk21.com
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