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Thunder Over Kandahar
 
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Thunder Over Kandahar [Paperback]

Sharon E. McKay , Rafal Gerszak

List Price: CDN$ 12.95
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Product Description

Quill & Quire

Two 14-year-old Muslim girls struggle through the mountains between Afghanistan and Pakistan, fleeing danger and certain death. To keep their spirits up, Yasmine tells Tamanna stories from her British childhood of Babar, the gray elephant in a green suit.

This sweet scene is one of several such moments in Thunder over Kandahar, a novel that careens between moments of deep humanity and shocking violence. For this story of two girls trapped in the middle of the conflict, Governor General’s Literary Award–winning author Sharon E. McKay spent three weeks in Afghanistan, visiting schools and travelling to the front lines with Canadian troops. Her research shines through on every page.

Careful to show both sides of the cultural divide, McKay avoids passing judgment. She uses as much detail as possible to illuminate the realities of the conflict, but steers away from imprinting Western values on the action. In one incident, a bus driver takes a bribe from the girls, then tells the other passengers they are his sisters. Because Muslim girls should not be travelling alone, the lie is considered “proper and expected.”

McKay offers rich descriptions of food, clothing, houses, landscape, military procedures, and local traditions. However, the details sometimes threaten to overwhelm the story. Also, coincidence plays a large role in the narrative, particularly in the story of Tamanna’s missing twin brother, who stretches credulity by appearing at not one, but two critical points. And how convenient that the girls happen to stumble upon a woman in the mountains who is able to tell a first-hand story of the Russian involvement in Afghanistan’s troubled past.

These are minor quibbles, however, and more than compensated for by the novel’s fast-paced action and appealing characters. In telling Yasmine and Tamanna’s story, ­McKay brings young readers face to face with the realities of modern Afghanistan, both the dark and the light.

Review

This suspenseful tale of two young women on their own in modern Afghanistan makes riveting reading. (Kirkus Reviews 201009)

Thunder over Kandahar provides a gripping, empathetic look at one of the most dangerous and misogynistic societies in existence today. (Michelle Superle Canadian Materials 20110131)

The girls' alternating viewpoints capture the heartbreaking trauma and concerned young people will be caught up in the issues. (Hazel Rochman Booklist 20101119)

Informative and inspiring... well-constructed and believable... This novel should become essential classroom reading for students in Grades 7 and 8. (Canadian Children's Book Centre 20110501)

Courage, love, sacrifice, and, most importantly, hope for a brighter future... McKay has written a wonderful novel of great importance. (edwardsmagazinebookclub.com 20101203)

...best understood as [an] enduring example of extreme circumstances inspiring selflessness. (Foreword Reviews 20110601)

This story, enhanced with black and white photographs and filled with drama and tension, realistically portrays contemporary life in Afghanistan. (Judean A. Wise, Library Media Specialist, Woodworth Middle School, Fond du Lac, WI Library Media Connection 201012)

Powerful... (Open Book Toronto 201012)

A riveting and suspenseful story... This book is an essential read for students in Grade 7 and up. (Professionally Speaking 20110214)

Fast-paced action and appealing characters...bring young readers face to face with the realities of modern Afghanistan. (Quill and Quire 201012)

McKay...portrays the unsettled nature of life in a war-torn country and especially the plight of the women... Highly recommended. (Resource Links 201012)

Actress Mozhan Marno's dramatic reading turns Sharon E McKay's novel Thunder Over Kandahar into powerful theater for the ears. (Judy Green Sacramento Bee 20110228)

What shines through this sad narrative is the love Afghans have for their country...(a) gripping tale. (School Library Journal )

A powerful read.... McKay is able to bring this far-away, well-researched story right into your bedroom (or wherever you like to read). (What If? Canada's Creative Teen Magazine )

Nothing short of a dramatic page-turner, guaranteed to stop your breath and keep you reading more. (wordofmousebooks.com )

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Amazon.com: 4.0 out of 5 stars (2 customer reviews)

5.0 out of 5 stars Thunder over Kandahar, Jan 6 2012
By stewartvic - Published on Amazon.com
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Thunder Over Kandahar (Paperback)
I received the book in ample time and the book was in excellent condition. I was very pleased with the service. Thanks for being so prompt.

1 of 2 people found the following review helpful
3.0 out of 5 stars Dramatic escape from the Taliban, Jun 28 2011
By Madigan McGillicuddy "Librarian" - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: Thunder Over Kandahar (Hardcover)
Tamanna is very unhappy about her parent's decision to return to Afghanistan. Having been raised in England her whole life, teenaged Tamanna finds the idea of leaving Britain daunting. Her parents still have so much love in their hearts for the beautiful mountains of Afghanistan, though, and they feel that it's up to people like them: educated, liberal, native Afghans, to reclaim their country and help rebuild it.

On the whole, this is a fairly unsympathetic look at the culture of Afghanistan. Tamanna's complete ignorance of local customs provides the perfect excuse to give readers plenty of exposition. Living in a city, the family suffers the claustrophobic effects of coping with Taliban edicts, enforced by brute squads of local bullies. Tamanna is initially dismayed that she must cover her hair at all times. Soon though, she misses her old veil, when the new restrictive burka, allowing only a narrow strip for her eyes to peep through, is demanded. Before she knows it, her pretty blue burka with silver thread is also considered "too immodest" and she is forced to trade with an old beggar woman for a plain yet filthy burka.

When her mother is beaten within an inch of her life for singing in the street (women are supposed to be silent) and no doctor will see her, the family decides to retreat to the Afghani countryside. It's extremely lonely there for Tamanna, and her father hires a local village girl, Yasmine, to be her companion. Yasmine leads a difficult life, with a brute of a father. Tamanna teaches her to read. The girls are excited that a new school is being built, and here the fast-pace and melodramatic events truly start to pick up. No sooner do they meet with some friendly American soldiers who are setting up the school, but they are intercepted by a Taliban raid... led by no other than Yasmine's long-lost twin brother. Dramalicious enough for you? It gets better.

Yasmine wants to escape her arranged marriage to a man old enough to be her grandfather and in all the confusion and fighting, the girls try to make an escape. Friendly French forces are delighted to meet a "local" who speaks perfect English and carries a British passport. They put the girls in a cab, and the sexist cabdriver decides not to take them to their location. Instead, the girls are faced with an incredible journey through the mountains, on foot. They are once again reunited with Yasmine's brother, who confesses that he was made to serve as a "dancing boy" - sort of a male prostitute - by the Taliban but he's working his way back to respectability with the military missions they're giving him now, including a possible suicide mission. All of this backstory with the brother was a bit of a throw-away, and honestly deserved some more thought or attention.

Tamanna hits her head and has amnesia. She is taken in by a nice family and changes her name. In the meantime, Yasmine uses Tamanna's passport to escape to England to be reunited with her "parents." Obviously, there is a lot here that stretches credulity with the twists and turns of this soap-opera plotline. I found it interesting that Tamanna, the only character seriously arguing that it would be a good idea to leave Afghanistan, is the only one who ends up staying.

While the break-neck pace this book may draw in reluctant readers, on the whole, the flat characterization and lack of warmth or good sense from many of the adults in the novel make this a tough read to get through. For a more sensitively drawn portrait of a girl struggling with an arranged marriage in Pakistan I'd recommend Shabanu by Suzanne Fisher Staples, as well as the sequel, Haveli. For another recent take on modern-day Afghanistan, I'd recommend Words In The Dust by Trent Reedy.
 Go to Amazon.com to see both reviews  4.0 out of 5 stars 

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