
	And the 
	Mountains Echoed, Khaled Hossein;  New York:  Riverhead Books, 
	2012.  404 pp.  $28.95
	 
	
	You have probably read The Kite Runner.  Maybe you read A Thousand 
	Splendid Suns. Like me, maybe you found these two novels several notches 
	above just good reads.  In my opinion, and that of my friends, Khaled 
	Hosseini’s third novel, And the Mountains Echoed, surpasses both of 
	his previous books.   The book is a series of inter-related stories that 
	delve deeply into the pain of loss and betrayal, the evil of greed and 
	ruthless ambition, and the uncomfortable terrain of ethical and moral 
	ambiguity.  We read also of the tender love of brother and sister, the means 
	by which desperate youth survive or choose not to survive, and other 
	experiences of life in the midst of internal and external conflict.  
	                Each 
	of the nine chapters is connected with the other chapters through the 
	appearance of, or reference to, characters from the other stories.  The 
	doctor who appears at the door of the Whadati house in Kabul becomes the 
	central figure in a later chapter.   Saboor, a primary character in the 
	first chapter, is merely mentioned as an ancestor of a character in another 
	chapter.  Abdullah and Pari, however, are present in each story by their 
	absence.  Whether in Kabul or San Francisco, whether in 1949, 1952, 1974, or 
	2010, the reader holds in suspense their unfinished story.
	                
	Hosseini brings the reader directly into the locale of a story:  “. . 
	.familiar sights—the carcasses hanging from hooks in the butcher shops; the 
	blacksmiths working their wooden wheels, hand-pumping their bellows; the 
	fruit merchants fanning flies off their grapes and cherries; the sidewalk 
	barber on the wicker chair stropping his razor.”   He has an uncanny skill 
	to fold an entire story into a single image.  Iqbal, disposed of his land by 
	a brutal mujahedeen, attempts to regain the land.  He surrenders the legal 
	documents to a local judge.  When he returns a few days later to receive 
	them with the judge’s certification, he learns that the documents had been 
	destroyed in “a small fire.”  Iqbal’s son is telling the story to Adel, the 
	son of the mujahedeen.  “And as he’s telling us that there’s nothing he can 
	do now without the papers, do you know what he has on his wrist?  A 
	brand-new gold watch he wasn’t wearing the last time my father saw him.”
	                The connections 
	among the stories are not random.  In an interview with Lois Alter Mark, in 
	HuffPost’s blog, Hosseini responds to a question about the title of the 
	book.  He first credits William Blake with the inspiration, then refers to 
	the prevalence of mountains in the novel.  He makes the comparison:  “Just 
	as a mountain would echo back a shout, the fateful acts committed before the 
	mountains too emit an echo. They have a rippling effect, expanding outward, 
	touching lives further and further away. I liked the idea of a decision or 
	an act echoing through both place and time, altering the fates of characters 
	both living and not yet born.”
	 
	Pat Chaffee, OP
	Racine, Wisconsin
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