I. Events – Analytical & Interpretive
II. Places – Symbolic & Thematic
III. Characters – Psychological & Moral Complexity
IV. Advanced Vocabulary, Motifs & Concepts
V. Guessing Citations – Close Reading & Interpretation
100

How does Nana’s suicide function structurally within the novel?

Possible answer: It forces Mariam into society while confirming Nana’s worldview, making Mariam’s later suffering feel inevitable.

100

How does the kolba function as both a refuge and a prison for Mariam?

Possible answer: It offers emotional safety but enforces social exclusion.

100

Why is Nana not simply a bitter or cruel character?

Possible answer: Her bitterness is a survival strategy shaped by betrayal and exclusion.

100

Why is the burqa symbolic even before it becomes mandatory?

Possible answer: It anticipates invisibility and erasure.

100

Who believes that hope is dangerous because it invites disappointment?

Possible answer: Nana.

200

Why is Mariam’s journey to Jalil’s house a turning point rather than merely an act of rebellion?

Possible answer: It shatters her illusions about paternal love and social belonging, initiating her emotional exile.

200

How does Kabul serve two contrasting roles for Mariam and Laila?

Possible answer: For Mariam, it is confinement; for Laila, it is possibility and intellectual growth.

200

How does Jalil embody moral weakness rather than villainy?

Possible answer: His kindness is genuine but collapses under social pressure.

200

How does harami operate as a social sentence rather than a description?

Possible answer: It permanently defines Mariam’s worth and limits her future.

200

Who accepts blame instinctively when things go wrong?

Possible answer: Mariam.

300

What is the symbolic significance of Mariam’s miscarriages beyond personal tragedy?

Possible answer: They represent her failure to gain value in a patriarchal system that defines women by motherhood.

300

How do destroyed neighborhoods reflect internal emotional states?

Possible answer: Physical ruin mirrors psychological trauma and loss.

300

How does Mariam internalize oppression rather than resist it early on?

Possible answer: She interprets suffering as deserved.

300

Why is silence a recurring motif for women?

Possible answer: Speech risks violence or shame.

300

Who equates love with obedience rather than mutual care?
.

Possible answer: Rasheed

400

Why does Hosseini juxtapose (i.e. places next to each other) Mariam’s emotional isolation with Laila’s family-centered upbringing?

Possible answer: To contrast female experiences and prepare for their eventual intersection.

400

Why is Herat associated with illusion rather than opportunity for Mariam?

Possible answer: It represents a world that appears open but denies her access.

400

Why is Hakim’s optimism both admirable and flawed?

Possible answer: He believes in progress while underestimating violence.

400

How does honor (nang) function as control rather than dignity?

Possible answer: It justifies punishment while excusing male behavior.

400

Who measures national success through children rather than politics?

Possible answer: Hakim.

500

What does Rasheed’s gradual cruelty suggest about power rather than temperament?

Possible answer: His violence escalates as his authority feels threatened, revealing power as conditional and fragile.

500

Why is school a politically charged space in Laila’s story?

Possible answer: Education becomes resistance in a society moving toward repression.

500

How does Fariba represent a different form of broken motherhood than Nana?

Possible answer: Her identity collapses after loss rather than betrayal.

500

Why does Hosseini avoid romanticizing suffering?

Possible answer: Pain is shown as dehumanizing, not ennobling.

500

Who loses identity when personal sacrifice is no longer rewarded?

Possible answer: Fariba.

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