In the novel, The Kite Runner, Khaled Hosseini writes a fictional story about a young Pashtun boy named Amir, who lives with his wealthy father, Baba, and his two Hazara servants, Ali and Hassan. Amir and Hassan share a strong bond with each other despite the fact that both of them are part of different ethnic groups. However, their friendship is torn apart when Amir decides to betray his best friend for Baba’s love during a time when political tensions were high in Afghanistan. When the Soviet Union decides to invade Afghanistan, this causes Amir and Baba to flee the country to Fremont, California, leaving behind Hassan and his gentle father, Ali, to a terrible fate. For many years, Amir has carried a strong guilt with him throughout his adulthood…
The reader also learns of the Loyalty and Devotion to Hassan to Amir. This is shown by Baba’s comment, “You know what always happens when the neighbourhood boys…
As a child and all throughout his life Khaled Hosseini loved reading. Khaled was born and raised, for a few years of his life, in Kabul, Afghanistan. Although Khaled has moved around quite a bit, he has lived in San Jose, California for much of his life. Khaled lived in Afghanistan during the years of the constitutional monarchy. He thought of his time in Afghanistan as very peaceful and quiet.…
Covering: The covering up of his eyes, face, and the large blood stains were an emphasis on the brutality of the situation. Amir had visited the stadium this scene took place in before the Taliban took over. When he revisited the stadium as a tourist in Afghanistan it was completely different. It was no longer a place of happiness to watch sports it was a place of evil for the Taliban to kill innocent people. The evilness of the Taliban was hidden in the mix of the evil in Afghanistan. The people in Afghanistan now only know evil, but with Amir revisiting and blind to how bad it has actually gotten he is astonished by the destruction. In the overall book there were many times he covered himself out of fear. For example, during the rape with Hassan the sense of covering was when he ran away so he didn’t have to see it happen. Here, he covered his eyes so he didn’t have to see the stoning.…
“There is a way to be good again.” Marks a point in Amirs life when he truly discovers redemption can be attainable even in the worst of circumstances. After years of dnial, lies, hiding and ignorance this phone conversation with Raham Khan plants the seeds for Amirs ultimate redemption. Khaled Hosseni’s The Kite Runner explores this theme as Amir faces emotional and physical hardship in an effort to quash the ghosts of his past. Throughout the novel Hosseni uses symbols to help illustrate Amir’s guit…
The political discourse and historical tragedies that affect a country can cause turmoil in the lives of the citizens that reside there. The people of Afghanistan have been forced to cope with the chaos of their country which has left them traumatized and inconvenienced. In the novel, The Kite Runner, each character has their lives drastically changed as the events of Afghanistan's past world issues create hardship, grief, and difference for the lives of Amir, Sohrab and Farid.…
In the novel The Kite Runner the character Amir Jan respond in a significant way to justice for Sohrab. Amir Jan feels that since Sohrab is his nephew and his half-brother Hassan is dead he should rescue sohrab from the orphanage and bring him back to America to live with him and his wife Soraya. Even though Hassan and Amir went through good times and bad times Amir feels it's his duty to help his family out though he did them wrong. Amir goes back to Pakistan to rescue Sohrab and find that he's in the hands of Assef the man that raped his brother.…
Hassan used to be a painful memory for Amir, because Amir's selfishness had led to their friendship ending. When Amir saves Sohrab in ways which he had wished that he had saved Hassan. Amir can now look back at Hassan, happily. "Then I blinked and, for just a moment, the hands holding the spool were the chipped-nailed, calloused hands of a harelipped boy..... "For you, a thousand times over," I heard myself say. Then I turned and ran. .......Because when spring comes, it melts the snow one flake at a time, and maybe I just witnessed the first flake melting." (Hosseini, 2003, p322-324). The metaphor of "the first flake melting" refers to Amir's redemption beginning, as he renews Sohrab's life and restores his own. Amir was running from his past in Afghanistan with Hassan for years, but when Sohrab entered his life, Amir was able to turn his life back into what it had once been. Since Sohrab is virtually Hassan to Amir, Amir can be with his best friend again. Amir's redemption is complete and he can continue with his…
This quote is important to the novel because it represents the crucial point in Amir’s life. At that moment, Amir is fighting against Assef, but he’s also sacrificing his life to save Sohrab as like Hassan sacrificed himself for Amir 26 years ago. Although Amir is badly beaten, he actually feels relieved as the guilt that he’s been suffering all his life has now been atoned for. From this quote, I learn that without being able to forgive yourself for your mistakes, you can’t have a fulfilled life. And, forgiveness only comes when you have truly tried to atone for your…
Baba says these words to Rahim Khan while he is talking about Amir at the end of Chapter 3, and the quotation reveals important traits in both Amir and Baba. With these words, Baba sums up one of Amir’s major character flaws—his cowardice—and Baba shows how much value he places in standing up for what is right. Baba is reluctant to praise Amir, largely because he feels Amir lacks the courage to even stand up for himself, leaving Amir constantly craving Baba’s approval. Amir’s desire for this approval as well as his cowardice later cause him to let Assef rape Hassan. The quotation also foreshadows the major test of Amir’s character that occurs when he must decide whether to return to Kabul to save Sohrab. As Amir searches for redemption, the question he struggles with is precisely what concerned Baba: does he have the courage and strength to stand up for what is right?…
To explain the first part of the quote, the reader has to look into the problems and events that go on in Amir's life. During the course of the book, Amir deals with things that not only involve him but many of his closest friends, and in a way, that fact, makes the story, because he learns to deal with his own problems just by taking the pain everyday, but knowing these problems don't involve only him really create the storyline and many of the dark parts of him. One of the dark parts of himself is his weakness, especially during the scene where his dear friend gets raped. Amir just stands there fully knowing whats going on, but because of his lack of courageousness, it happened and it left an imprint in his mind. Another dark part in himself was the way he treated people. Although he was really a very meek type of person, because of his status he treated many of the people he cared about like they were insignificant or he took advantage of them, especially towards Hassan, his childhood friend, later to be revealed as his brother. This served as a dark part of his life because it made him selfish towards Hassan and other people.…
Babas lack of love and affection towards Amir has proven to change Amir into a boy that is constantly in search for his fathers love. Amirs best friend,” Hassan” is always there to protect him when he gets into fights because he is too timid to stand up for himself. Baba is reluctant to praise Amir because he feels as Amir lacks courage and is a coward in many situations. For example; when Assef was disturbing Amir, Hassan had to take out his slingshot and threaten Assef to leave at once because Amir was too scared to do anything about it in that situation. “A boy who won’t stand up for himself becomes a man who can’t stand up to anything.”…
Firstly, throughout the whole novel, the story is always linked with the relationship between Amir and Hassan who is the servant of Amir. Hassan is a person who has brave and positive character, but Amir’s character stand on the opposite side of Hassan, which is cowardice. Amir shows the feeling that he is jealous of Hassan…
Years after leaving his homeland, Amir receives a letter through Rahim Khan that causes him to succumb to a heart-wrenching emotional turbulence, in it Hassan stating, “I dream that someday you will return to Kabul… if you do, you will find an old faithful friend waiting for you”. Even after the passing of 26 lengthy and unpredictable years, Amir’s considerable wrongdoings and irreparable actions, and the vast distance between the two men, Hassan remains the ever-ardent and dedicated…
Throughout the novel The Kite Runner, Khaled Hosseini gives the reader a clear insight into the character of Hassan. One instance in which Hosseini does this in the description of Hassan’s eyes, “eyes that looked, depending on the light, gold, green, even sapphire” (3). Each color represents Hassan in a different way, gold for wealth (Parker), green for his Islamic faith (Fauzan) and rebirth, and blue - sapphire is a shade of deep blue - for trust and loyalty (Parker).…