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45 pages 1 hour read

Khaled Hosseini

And the Mountains Echoed

Fiction | Novel | Adult | Published in 2012

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Chapter 1Chapter Summaries & Analyses

Chapter 1 Summary: Fall 1952

A father tells a story to his children (Abdullah and Pari) at the close of a day. He tells the parable of a poor farmer named Baba Ayub, who toiled, “tending to his meagre pistachio trees” in Maidan Sabz, a desolate village (1). Ayub considered himself fortunate because he had a loving family with a good wife and five dutiful, wonderful children, although he felt a special affinity for his youngest son, Qais. However, Qais had a tendency to sleepwalk, and because his parents feared they would lose him, they tied a little bell around him so they would be able to hear if he began to sleepwalk. Even though he outgrew his tendency to sleepwalk, he could not part with his bell.

A div, a giant monstrous creature that eats children, comes to Maidan Sabz. The div approaches the apathetic Ayub household and warnsned them to make their child offering by dawn. Believing in the fable’s central theme, that “a finger had to be cut to save the hand” (5), Baba Ayub drew names from a sack, and his beloved Qais was chosen.

Even though they offering of Qais as a sacrifice was made, the conditions in Maidan Sabz are awful, suffering from drought, and the children are dying of thirst. Baba Ayub is in such despair over the loss of his youngest child, even years later. Stricken with guilt for not fighting the div, believing that the villagers are talking about him, he leaves his family. After a long, arduous journey, he reaches the div's fort at the mountaintop and sets out climbing it immediately, “his resolve...to fulfill his quest [...] unshaken” (7).

He meets with the div, who does not respond to Ayub's challenge right away. The div asks where Baba Ayub is from, why he is there, and then wants to show him something. After being sentgoing through a labyrinth of rooms and stairwells, they finally arrive at the most magnificent garden that Baba Ayub has ever seen. There awere children running happily and playing together, even his beloved Qais. According to the div, Ayub has passed a test. Qais is givenhas a wonderful life, a life that Ayub could never provide him. Ayub wants to take him home, but he must realize that neither of them could can ever return. Either Qais can never come back to this new life that he now knows, or Ayub could choose to take Qais him home, and but he can never return to the life he’s grown accustomed to. Ayub leaves Qais at the div's fortress. The div gives him a potion to drink on his journey home that will wipe away his memory, even of Qais's existence.

Following the journey, rRains fell plentifully on Maidan Sabz and there was never a drought again. Baba Ayub had plentiful and successful crops and “thought about his long life and gave thanks for all the bounty and joy he had been given” (15). However, he sometimes would hear the jingling of a bell, and he would experience a “wave of something, something like the tail end of a sad dream...but then it passed, as all things do. It passed” (15). 

Chapter 1 Analysis

Hosseini devotes the entire opening chapter to a fable, and while this at first glance may not be that remarkable, it cannot be ignored, as the entire novel is only nine chapters long. The fable that Saboor tells his children serves several functions. First, it establishes Saboor as a storyteller. He is revered for it and passes it on to his son Abdullah. In addition, storytelling is a major motif in this novel, and so it is only appropriate that the author establishes this important reality immediately. The important truth in this story reveals a few themes that re-emerge throughout the lives of the many narrators that this novel hasin the novel. One is that sometimes, individual sacrifices need to be made for the good of others.

Another major theme that appears  Another idea that is echoed later in the novel on is the twofold curse or e curse/blessing of lost memory. However, despite family ties being broken and memories wiped clean, there is a connection almost at an elemental level between people that cannot be fully removed—this concept will reappear between the main characters Pari and Abdullah later in the story. In the same way that Baba Ayub doesn’t remember his son, but just faintly recalls him when he hears bells, Pari and Abdullah cannot remember each other, but have somehow still realize that an integral part of their lives is missing..

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