Sparks Like Stars

Author:

Nadia Hashimi

Publisher:

Harpercollins Publisher, USA

Rs434 Rs550 21% OFF

Availability: Available

    

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Publisher

Harpercollins Publisher, USA

Publication Year 2021
ISBN-13

9780063117433

ISBN-10 9780063117433
Binding

Paperback

Number of Pages 390 Pages
Language (English)
Dimensions (Cms) 21 X 14 X 2
Weight (grms) 464 
Kabul, 1978: The daughter of a prominent family, sitara zalmani lives a privileged life in Afghanistan thriving cosmopolitan capital. The 1970s are a time of remarkable promise under the leadership of people like Sardar daoud, Afghanistan’s progressive President, and sitara’s beloved father, his right-hand man. But the ten-year-old sitara’s world is shattered when Communists stage a coup, assassinating the President and sitara’s entire family. Only she survives. Smuggled out of the palace by a guard named Shair, sitara finds her way to the home of a female American diplomat, who adopts her and raises her in America. In her new country, sitara takes on a new name—aryana shepherd—and throws herself into her studies, eventually becoming a renowned surgeon. A survivor, aryana has refused to look back, choosing instead to bury the trauma and devastating loss she endured. New York, 2018: forty years after that fatal night in Kabul, aryana’s world is rocked again when an elderly patient appears in her examination room—a man she never expected to see again. It is chair, the soldier who saved her, yet may have murdered her entire family. Seeing him awakens aryana’s fury and desire for answers, perhaps, revenge. Realizing that she cannot go on without finding the truth, aryana embarks on a quest that takes her back to Kabul battleground between the corrupt government and the fundamentalist taliban—and through shadowy memories of the world she loved and lost. Bold, illuminating, heart-breaking, yet hopeful, sparks like stars is a story of home—of America and Afghanistan, tragedy and survival, reinvention and remembrance, told in Nadia hashimi’s singular voice

Nadia Hashimi

Nadia Hashimi’s parents left Afghanistan in the 1970s, before the Soviet invasion. In 2002, she visited Afghanistan for the first time with her family. She lives with her husband, an Afghan-born neurologist, and their four children in the Washington, D.C.suburbs, where she works as a pediatrician.
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