Book Review of A Thousand Splendid Suns 17th century Afghanistan poet Saib-e-Tabrizi wrote this commendatory poem after visiting Kabul. ‘Every street of Kabul is enthralling to the eye; Through the bazaars‚ caravans of Egypt pass; One could not count the moons that shimmer on her roofs; And the thousand splendid suns that hide behind her walls.’ In this world there are still many women say that they are suffering unfair treatment and demand for the right to vote‚ the right to manage. But
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love and support from my family and friends to stay positive during my long recovery. Many people lose hope and get discouraged easily when life becomes hard‚ however‚ like Mariam and Laila‚ I did not give up. In Khaled Hosseini’s novel A Thousand Splendid Suns‚ Mariam and Laila experience physical and emotional pain. The women live in Kabul under the Taliban with no rights and little freedom. Additionally‚ they are married to an abusive husband named Rasheed. To endure a life with little freedom
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everything they said or did was based on what their heart desired. There are three characters in this sections reading that apply to this definition of a hero. From “A Thousand Splendid Suns” Mariam and Laila are both heroes and from “Hamlet‚” and Hamlet is the third hero according to this definition of a hero. In the book “A Thousand Splendid Suns‚” there are two characters that fit the role as hero in my eyes. The first character from this story is Mariam. Mariam is an extremely hard workingwoman who as
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Looking at the novels title A Thousand Splendid Suns the reader would think it’s a happy novel‚ however there’s nothing particularly "splendid" one would assume about the novel. From the very beginning of the novel the author‚ Khaled Hosseini inserts hints and foreshadowing to aware the reader that it will be an unhappy story. This is evident in the following illustration when Mariam breaks the sugar bowl ‚ "It was the last peice that slipped from Mariam’s fingers‚ that fell to the wooden floorboards
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Cited: Daniel. Bible. N.p.: n.p.‚ n.d. Print. Exodus. Bible. N.p.: n.p.‚ n.d. Print. Hosseini‚ Khaled. A Thousand Splendid Suns. New York: Riverhead‚ 2007. Print. ""Hotel Rwanda" Portrays Hero Who Fought Genocide." National Geographic. National Geographic Society‚ n.d. Web. 01 Dec. 2012. <http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2004/12/1209_041209_hotel_rwanda
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“I used to worship you . . . On Thursdays‚ I sat for hours waiting for you . . . I thought about you all the time . . . I didn’t know you were ashamed of me.” (pg. 50 *Mariam’s last words to Jalil‚ her Father*) In Part 1 of A Thousand Splendid Suns‚ Mariam is broken to pieces when she realizes her mother was right all along about Jalil being ashamed of her. He was scared that letting her into his normal life would affect his reputation which he did not want tainted. He did visit her occasionally
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In the novel A Thousand Splendid Suns‚ shame and discrimination against women is a main theme that evolves throughout the novel. Growing up Mariam is always reminded by her mother that she was a harami‚ an illegitimate child. Her mother tries to hold Mariam back from progressing by reminding her of shame‚ even when she wants to attend school‚ Nana claims‚ ”They will call you a harami. They will say the most terrible things about you.”(19). Despite Mariam motivation to attend school‚ her mother
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The walls of a library enclose on thousands of novels that contain fictional and non-fictional stories‚ which depict the world outside the walls in some way shape or form. Each and every novel has a unique set of characters‚ themes‚ symbols and conflicts that are carefully intertwined together by an author attempting to give his audience a source of entertainment and an insight to the human condition. It is on the reader’s shoulders to correctly interpret the author’s message by analyzing it through
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In A Thousand Splendid Suns‚ Hosseini establishes Mariam as a powerless‚ young woman‚ set to marry a cold‚ abusive husband to demonstrate the easy oppression against women in a man-ruled culture. While Rasheed‚ her husband‚ is seen as important in his own eyes‚ Mariam is treated as an object for him due to her social status as a woman‚ than as an equal to him. In the end Mariam breaks out of the social norms of by uniting with another woman to achieve what she most desires‚ freedom‚ and gives up
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marriage quite differently‚ especially in India‚ Pakistan‚ and Afghanistan. To have an arranged marriage at a young age is considered the “norm” for many cultures since there is very little freedom for women to choose who they want to wed. In A Thousand Splendid Suns‚ Mariam is definitely hesitant about marrying Rasheed – shaking as she even struggles to say “yes” to Mullah when he asks her if she agrees to take Rasheed as her lawfully wedded husband. As she is rushed into an arranged marriage by her father
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