The Breadwinner ends hopefully, with most of Parvana’s family excitedly beginning their journey to Mazur-e-Sharif, where her older sister Nooria will marry. They are accompanied by a male family friend since Parvana’s father—who is suddenly deposited from prison in front of their bombed-out house with no explanation— is too ill to make the journey with the others. Parvana and her father are content to travel behind them slowly, but their hopeful trip disintegrates when they are told that the Taliban have just taken over the government in Mazur-e-Sharif. People are being slaughtered by the thousands, and those who are able are leaving the city in droves, many fleeing to refugee camps, some in Uzbekistan and Tajikistan.
Parvana’s father dies, and she, still dressed as a boy, continues her journey alone. She is simply “looking for her family.” Along her way she collects a baby, a one-legged angry boy, and a little girl and her grandmother. Only 11, almost 12, Parvana cares for them and leads them to occasional places of safety, but also to starvation, exhaustion, and horror. Their known enemy is the Taliban, but also extends to anyone dropping bombs that explode their attempts to live life.
A Goodreads friend said that this book is written not only for mature middle-schoolers, but for everyone. I agree. Deborah Ellis writes well about events that we should know about.