Revue de presse
A story of love, separation, friendship, compassion, exile, memory and the troubled history of Afghanistan, spanning three continents and 60 years... Hosseini is a master storyteller and his characters brim with life... This novel will not disappoint his many admirers (Paul Dunn The Times)
Hosseini’s evocative tales don’t just capture hearts, they break them (Glamour)
I defy any critics less high-minded than, say, F.R. Leavis not to enjoy the sheer zest with which Hosseini goes about his business here – or admire the unhurried confidence with which he sweeps through the years. And if they do admit that resistance is futile and allow their heartstrings to be shamelessly tugged, they might spot something else as well: in its admittedly unsubtle way, the novel gives a thorough airing to the central question of whether it’s better to stay true to your roots or rise above them ... Let’s face it, Hosseini is a master storyteller (James Walton Spectator)
Fascinating and moving (Stylist)
A profoundly moving story of how families love, betray, honour and make sacrifices for each other (Woman & Home)
We defy you not to cry (Asos)
Yes, there will be tears (InStyle)
Heart warming and beautiful (Essentials)
Clever and moving (Easy Living)
Hosseini pulls off his usual – impressive – trick of breaking your heart and leaving you smiling (Helen Brown Daily Telegraph)
Tremendously moving (Omid Djalili Daily Express)
Touching and epic (Sunday Telegraph)
A worthy successor … Part of Hosseini’s effectiveness as a storyteller is the way he draws on universal signifiers of myth and symbol … In mining such truths about human experience, Hosseini digs deep and brings up diamonds (Rachel Hore Independent on Sunday)
A touching story of love across time and continents (Sunday Express)
Takes you on an irresistible treasure trail of stories from Kabul to Paris, via San Francisco and the Greek island of Tinos … Hosseini’s characters are beautifully drawn … For a novel that will change how you judge yourself and others, it has to be Hosseini (Sarah Pyper Stylist)
I was looking forward to sinking into the lush narrative of Khaled Hosseini’s And the Mountains Echoed … Hosseini’s book is an absorbing read. His characters are nuanced and their overlapping narratives stay with you. It’s a heartbreaking and beautifully told story of sibling love and loss (Emma Rion Stylist)
The key to Hosseini’s story-telling is to keep us constantly guessing … Hosseini has a gift for lyrical description, but the chief merit of his style is a simplicity that allows him to go straight to the heart. He has written a magnificent, compassionate, life-affirming novel (Anthony Gardner Mail on Sunday)
A beautifully narrated tale ... It is impossible to read Hosseini’s novels without feeling at times that your heart is being ripped out and yet somehow you finish the novel feeling as if you have been given a very special gift (Lizzy Greenhalgh Lady)
A heartbreaking story of enduring sibling love (Good Housekeeping)
Hosseini goes straight to the heart of the matter in this magnificent, compassionate, life-affirming novel (Irish Mail)
His third engrossing tale of life, love, hope, despair and redemption set against the backdrop of war-ravaged Afghanistan ... The novel’s poignant, bitter-sweet conclusion will almost certainly bring tears to your eyes — devotees of the emotionally charged Kite Runner would expect no less (Kath Whitbourn Daily Mail)
Emotionally wrenching (Luisa Metcalfe Scottish Daily Express)
He is a master of that principle: get your readers where they want to go, but not in the way they expect ... And the Mountains Echoed charges its readers for the emotional particles they are, giving them what they want with a narrative facility as great as any blockbusting author alive (Alexander Linklater Observer)
This is a shamelessly enjoyable book (Philip Hensher Guardian)
He brings a real, human Afgha