Silent Hearts Audiobook By Gwen Florio cover art

Silent Hearts

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Silent Hearts

By: Gwen Florio
Narrated by: Cassandra Campbell
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About this listen

For fans of A Thousand Splendid Suns comes a stirring novel set in Afghanistan​ about two women - an American aid worker and her local interpreter - who form an unexpected friendship despite their utterly different life experiences and the ever-increasing violence that surrounds them in Kabul.

In 2001, Kabul is suddenly a place of possibility as people fling off years of repressive Taliban rule. This hopeful chaos brings together American aid worker Liv Stoellner and Farida Basra, an educated Pakistani woman still adjusting to her arranged marriage to Gul, the son of an Afghan strongman whose family spent years of exile in Pakistan before returning to Kabul.

Both Liv and her husband take positions at an NGO that helps Afghan women recover from the Taliban years. They see the move as a reboot - Martin for his moribund academic career, Liv for their marriage. But for Farida and Gul, the move to Kabul is fraught, severing all ties with Farida’s family and her former world, and forcing Gul to confront a chapter in his life he’d desperately tried to erase.

The two women, brought together by Farida’s work as an interpreter, form a nascent friendship based on their growing mutual love for Afghanistan, though Liv remains unaware that Farida is reporting information about the Americans’ activities to Gul’s family, who have ties to the black market.

As the bond between Farida and Liv deepens, war-scarred Kabul acts in different ways upon them, as well as their husbands. Silent Hearts is an absorbing, complex portrayal of two very different but equally resilient women caught in the conflict of a war that will test them in ways they never imagined.

©2018 Gwen Florio (P)2018 Simon & Schuster
Fiction Historical Fiction Literary Fiction Women's Fiction World Literature Marriage Feel-Good
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Good book

I feel like I listen to real true story but it is not true story. It just good book to listen to.

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Heartbreakingly Insightful.

I never thought of a Burka as a protection before. To me it was control and domination. To be a woman in a society where you have no choice on whom to marry, when to marry or what that marriage will look like is unimaginable to me. All women have had to deal with unwanted male attention. The Me Too movement has highlighted how differently the sexes see the same situation. Wienstein, Rose, Lauer and other all claimed they were in a Relationship; that their groping and fondling was welcome... so even in a more liberal, open society, women learn to protect themselves. In Afghanistan, after the Taliban, a burka was a necessary tool to allow a woman some minimal control.

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