I've noticed that other reviewers cut this author a lot of
slack for contrived and emotionally manipulative plots, but I'm not that
generous. This book meanders hither and
thither, all over the world, back and forth in time, and among characters that
are sometimes loosely connected, at best.
There's too much going on here for me.
It's almost as though he didn't have enough material for the primary
plot, and so he whisked in a few others.
The main story is that of the separation of two young siblings, which I
think is a more heartbreaking storyline than the loss of a child. Abdullah adores his young sister Pari, but
their father allows a wealthy couple in Kabul
to adopt Pari so that he can perhaps somehow manage to provide for the rest of
his family in a small Afghan village.
The central question then is whether or not brother and sister will ever
reunite. Two of the other story lines
involve young girls with medical issues.
Roshi has a cracked skull and gains the sympathy of two cousins, Timur
and Idris, both of whom have the means to get her the neurosurgery that she
needs. Idris resents Timur and the
flamboyant manner in which he makes known his many good works. Timur's lack of humility, however, is of no
consequence to those he helps; their gratitude is boundless. I get it:
it's better to perform acts of kindness and brag about it than to do
nothing at all. The other girl is
Thalia. Her plight inspires Markos to
abandon photography and pursue a career in plastic surgery, the spoils of which
allow him to correct cleft palates in poverty-stricken areas. The strongest image that I will take away from this
book is that of a child horribly disfigured by a dog and whose mother can
barely bring herself to look at her.
1 comment:
Oh dear...I had no idea what this book was about.
THANK YOU for your honest review. I appreciate it.
Elizabeth
Silver's Reviews
My Blog
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