Not since Jeanette Walls's The Glass Castle has a memoir of a hard-scrabble childhood taken the literary world so by storm. Tara is "home-schooled" by her fundamentalist Mormon parents in the hinterlands of Idaho. Never entering a formal educational setting until she is 17, it becomes the turning point in her life. But her childhood was a education in its own right, and this memoir lays it bare-- the end-of-days cult of her father, the rejection not only of public schooling but also the medical profession, the isolation from relatives, the cruel inter-sibling abuse she suffers. Nevertheless, it's a beautifully written story.
The latest book by the author of The Kite Runner reads like a collection of short stories, but they are all interconnected. The link between stories isn’t always immediately apparent and there are some diversions that take the reader far from Kabul, and sometimes confusingly so (the detour to Greece was interesting, but a bit disconnected from the rest of the storyline, I thought). There were some great narratives—one in particular that I think was worth the whole of the book— a story about Afghani-American cousins, Idris and Timur, who return to Kabul to attempt to regain an ancestral home, abandoned after the Soviet invasion. While Timur goes out and carouses and flaunts his American wealth, Idris spends most of his time showing charity to a young girl in hospital, a victim of an unspeakable act of violence which leaves her in need of surgery in a western nation. Idris, himself a doctor, promises to arrange the needed medical intervention, but when he returns to the US, the...

Comments
Post a Comment