1. When the novel begins and Amir says “I became what I am today at the age of twelve,” he is referring to when he witnessed his friend get rapped and made no action to do anything about it. His assertion is not entirely true, because he underwent many other life transforming actions. Amir was changed by the facts of growing up with no mother and a unusual afghan father, his character was undoubtedly changed when he went back to Afghanistan and found out that he and Hassan were half-brothers and went on a treacherous journey to find his half-brother’s son. Amir would be described as a sensitive, caring man who was hard on himself in his childhood all the way up to his adult years.
2. Amir and Hassan’s relationship was extremely similar to Baba and Ali’s. Amir and Hassan were the closest things to brothers or best friends that each other had, in just the same way that Baba and Ali were, but Hassan and Ali were never called friends of Amir or Baba. The relationship between Ali and Hassan was loyal and friendly from one side, but betraying and deceitful from the other. They are so different in the ways they behave with each other, because Amir is jealous of Hassan, but Hassan never wants to hurt anyone, especially Amir. Because of his jealousy towards Hassan for being loved by Baba, Amir inflects small cruelties onto him. No, I had not already guessed the true relationship between Hassan and Amir, but when I learned of it, I was surprised, but it made sense.
3. Amir always wants to please his father, because he wants to impress Baba more than Hassan does. Amir goes to the lengths of getting Hassan and Ali to move out of his house, which in the end could have been the reason that Hassan and his wife were killed, because he may have ended up in America with Baba and Amir. Baba is a man who stood up for his beliefs and would risk his life for them. Baba did not conform to the rules of the Afghan world in those days, but he did