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1. The phrase “a thousand
splendid suns,” from the poem by Saib-e-Tabrizi, is quoted twice in the
novel – once as Laila’s family prepares to leave Kabul, and again when
she decides to return there from Pakistan. It is also echoed in one of
the final lines: “Miriam is in Laila’s own heart, where she shines with
the bursting radiance of a thousand suns.” Discuss the thematic
significance of this phrase.
2. Mariam’s mother tells her: “Women like us. We endure. It’s all we
have.” Discuss how this sentiment informs Mariam’s life and how it
relates to the larger themes of the novel.
3. By the time Laila is rescued from the rubble of her home by Rasheed
and Mariam, Mariam’s marriage has become a miserable existence of
neglect and abuse. Yet when she realizes that Rasheed intends to marry
Laila, she reacts with outrage. Given that Laila’s presence actually
tempers Rasheed’s abuse, why is Mariam so hostile toward her?
4. Laila’s friendship with Mariam begins when she defends Mariam from a
beating by Rasheed. Why does Laila take this action, despite the
contempt Mariam has consistently shown her?
5. Growing up, Laila feels that her mother’s love is reserved for her
two brothers. “People,” she decides, “shouldn’t be allowed to have new
children if they’d already given away all their love to their old ones.”
How does this sentiment inform Laila’s reaction to becoming pregnant
with Rasheed’s child? What lessons from her childhood does Laila apply
in raising her own children?
6. At several points in the story, Mariam and Laila pass themselves off
as mother and daughter. What is the symbolic importance of this
subterfuge? In what ways is Mariam’s and Laila’s relationship with each
other informed by their relationships with their own mothers?
7. One of the Taliban judges at Mariam’s trial tells her, “God has made
us different, you women and us men. Our brains are different. You are
not able to think like we can. Western doctors and their science have
proven this.” What is the irony in this statement? How is irony employed
throughout the novel?
8. Laila’s father tells her, “You’re a very, very bright girl. Truly you
are. You can be anything that you want.” Discuss Laila’s relationship
with her father. What aspects of his character does she inherit? In what
ways is she different?
9. Mariam refuses to see visitors while she is imprisoned, and she calls
no witnesses at her trial. Why does she make these decisions?
10. The driver who takes Babi, Laila, and Tariq to the giant stone
Buddhas above the Bamiyan Valley describes the crumbling fortress of
Shahr-e-Zohak as “the story of our country, one invader after another…
we’re like those walls up there. Battered, and nothing pretty to look
at, but still standing.” Discuss the metaphorical import of this passage
as it relates to Miriam and Laila. In what ways does their story reflect
the larger story of Afghanistan’s troubled history?
11. Among other things, the Taliban forbid “writing books, watching
films, and painting pictures.” Yet despite this edict, the film Titanic
becomes a sensation on the black market. Why would people risk the
Taliban’s violent reprisals for a taste of popcorn entertainment? What
do the Taliban’s restrictions on such material say about the power of
artistic expression and the threat it poses to repressive political
regimes?
12. While the first three parts of the novel are written in the past
tense, the final part is written in present tense. What do you think was
the author’s intent in making this shift? How does it change the effect
of this final section?
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