Born a generation apart and with very different ideas about love and family, Mariam and Laila are two women brought jarringly together by war, by loss and by fate. As they endure the ever escalating dangers around them-in their home as well as in the streets of Kabul-they come to form a bond... read more
Khaled Hosseini writes about Mariam a fifteen year old girl sent to Kabul to marry Rasheed a shoe maker after her mother dies. Nearly two decades later, a friendship grows between Mariam and a local teenager, Laila, as strong as the ties between mother and daughter after becoming Rasheed's... read more (warning: may contain spoilers)
“Like a compass needle that points north, a man's accusing finger always finds a woman.”Nana
“Regret... when it comes to you, I have oceans of it.”Jalil
“Women have always had it hard in this country, Laila, but they're probably more free now, under the communists, and have more rights than they've ever had before.”Babi
“Tell your secrets to the wind but don't blame it for telling the trees.”Laila
“A society has no chance of success if its women are uneducated...”
“To me, it's nonsense - and very dangerous nonsense at that - all this talk of I'm Tajik and you're Pashtun and he's Hazara and she's Uzbek. We're all Afghans, and that's all that should matter.”Babi/Hakim
“<Miriam>...A woman who will be like a rock in a riverbed, enduring without complaint, her grace not sullied but shaped by the turbulence that washes over her. Already Laila sees something behind this <Miriam's> young girl's eyes, something deep in her core, that neither Rasheed nor the Taliban will be able to break. Something as hard and unyielding as a block of limestone. Something that, in the end, will be her undoing and Laila's salvation.”
“I will follow you to the ends of the world.”Tariq
““Nor was she old enough to appreciate the injustice, to see that it is the creators of the harami who are culpable, not the harami, whose only sin is being born.””
“The past held only this wisdom: that love was a damaging mistake, and its accomplice, hope, a treacherous illusion. And whenever those twin poisonous flowers began to sprout in the parched land of that field, she uprooted them. She uprooted them and ditched them before they took hold" (229)”Narrator
“Though there had been moments of beauty in it. Mariam knew that life had not been kind to her. But as she walked the final twenty paces, she could not help but wish for more of it”Narrator
“This was a legitimate end to a life of illegitimate beginnings”Narrator
“It falls on the sober to pay for the sins of the drunk.”
“That love was a damaging mistake, and its accomplice ,hope ,a treacherous illusion .”Mariam
Part One: chapters 1-15
Part Two: chapters 16-26
Part Three: chapters 27-47
Part Four: chapters 48-51
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