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    Kite Runner Monologue

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    I ran down every street looking into the sky hoping to see my blue kite‚ but really I just wanted to find my kite runner. Finally I come around the corner of a falling apart building that leads to a dark ally. Of course it has to be an ally‚ a dark ally! Everything bad ever happens in an ally. Their I see Hassan in the snow‚ Assef ontop of him. Assefs two minions close by. It took me a second to realize what was happening. My feet felt glued to the ground I stood on‚ but I knew if I didn’t do something

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    In Khaled Hosseini’s book‚ The Kite Runner‚ the author brings the reader on a journey where we are introduced to two young boys‚ Amir and Hassan. It is a story about their friendship and the choices they make while growing up in Kabul. Although‚ Amir and Hassan are raised in the same household‚ and are fed from same breast‚ they grow up in different realities: Amir is a Pashtun and the son of a rich and noble man‚ Hassan is a Hazara and Amir’s servant‚ whose father also served for Amir’s father.

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    In the novel The Kite Runner by Khaled Hosseini‚ we see a young boy named Amir. The book starts off with Amir living in Kabul‚ Afghanistan with his father and his servants. His best friend‚ Hassan‚ is also his servant. Hassan and Amir spend a lot of time together and they enter a kite flying competition where Amir will fly the kite and Hassan will be the “kite runner”. Hassan tells Amir he will do anything to get the kite so Amir can make his father proud. Hassan ends up getting raped by a boy named

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    A common theme throughout the novel The Kite Runner is suffering. Many characters deal with emotional pain in their lives especially Sohrab‚ who suffers the most out of all of them. Among the many characters who go through grief is Amir. The main issue he struggles with in life is the relationship he shares with his father. While Hassan is getting assaulted by Assef Amir comes to the decision not to help him in order for him to obtain the blue kite Hassan has. “Nothing was free in this world. Maybe

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    The Kite Runner Quotes

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    born – stole Ali’s honor. With that in mind‚ Baba’s bit of advice to Amir contains a good deal of self-loathing. Amir said this quote when explaining the rules of the kite tournament and how similar it was to the Afghans. The afghans cherish customs but they regard the rules‚ like the tournament. They don’t have rules‚ just fly your kite‚ and cut your opponents. The significance is to simply draw a line between what is cherished and the rules. At this point Baba and

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    a novel‚ I believe what matters most are the ideas‚ because they introduce themes and symbols which makes the novel more significant‚ as small things such as the kite in “The Kite Runner”‚ by Khaled Hosseini‚ have a greater meaning in the novel and represent themes. In “The Kite Runner”‚ I noticed three symbols: The cleft lip‚ the kite‚ and the lamb. Hassan’s cleft lip is one of his most representative features as a child‚ and is one of the features Amir refers to most describing him; “A Chinese

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    Hassan Blue Kite

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    When Amir wins the kite race in the beginning of the book and right before Hassan gets raped. Hassan says to Amir “"For you‚ a thousand times over‚" (Hosseini‚ 67)‚ before running after the blue kite. Here Hassan is pledging his loyalty Amir saying that no matter what the cost‚ he will bring Amir happiness. This blue kite shaped the way that the book would proceed because of the fact that when Hassan said this Amir did not reciprocate it back. This was just a brief glance at what Amir actually thought

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    Kite Runner Essay

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    Patrick CouttsDue: December 19‚ 2012 | ENG3U1-04 | Jack Hammond | Surpassing The Past Patrick Coutts Hammond/ENG3U1-04 December 19‚ 2012 A strong‚ healthy relationship between a father and son allows for a happy family and lifetime. In The Kite Runner‚ Khaled Hosseini illustrates the fragile relationship between Baba and Amir and how easily a third party could affect the relationship. Amir can now transcend his relationship with his father by confronting his past‚ locating his courage and

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    Kite Runner

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    Tone and Mood  You might think about the difference between mood and tone as  follows: Mood as the attitude of the author toward the subject‚ and  Tone as the attitude of the author toward the audience. Usually.  Sometimes there is a fine line‚ and Tone can be an attitude toward the  implied audience and subject both.     Tone - the writer’s attitude toward the audience; a writer’s tone can be serious‚ sarcastic‚ tongue-incheek‚ solemn‚ objective‚ satirical‚ solemn‚ wicked‚ etc. - Tone is the

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    In the realistic fiction novel‚ The Kite Runner by Khaled Hosseini‚ Amir‚ a conflicted‚ Afghan child‚ betrays Hassan‚ his childhood friend and servant‚ propelling them into a complex loop of redemption fueled by the justice‚ injustice‚ and dignity theme. Throughout Amir’s childhood‚ he fails to be the traditional‚ masculine child his father‚ Baba‚ envisioned‚ while Hassan‚ who is of less respectable‚ Hazara heritage and lower social class‚ suits Baba’s ideal quite well‚ leading to Amir’s jealousy

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