The Kite Runner by Khaled Hosseini

The Kite Runner” by Khaled Hosseini

To start with, a health warning: reading Khaled Hosseini will give you heartache.  But don’t worry – you can be cured.

This story is told by Amir, the son of an affluent businessman, living in a fashionable area of Kabul in the 1960s; his friend Hassan lives with his father, the house servant, in a shack at the bottom of the garden.  Both have lost their mothers (Amir’s died in childbirth, Hassan’s ran away).  The lives of the two men and their sons are closely entwined; Amir has an aching need to please his father, his beloved, feared Baba.  Hassan’s father Ali is quiet, protective.  The boys play endlessly together, just as their fathers did in their youth.  But Amir is a Pashtun, one of the ethnic majority in Afghanistan, a Sunni.  Hassan is a Hazara, of the Shi’a minority that has suffered discrimination and persecution for generations.  So, these are unequal friendships.  Amir reads to Hassan from atop their favorite pomegranate tree; later, the pomegranate juice runs down Hassan’s face, like blood.

And then there are the kites, and the exhilarating ritual of kite-running – the technicalities of which you will have to read for yourself.  Here there is pain and pleasure: kite-running cuts your hands to shreds.  A blue kite lands in a dusty alley, one cloudy winter’s evening.  This triggers a brutal act, and a bitter betrayal that haunts Amir to the end of the story.  Soon after, he and Baba become refugees as the Soviets invade, escaping over the border to Pakistan and then to America, his highly successful father’s life now reduced to “one disappointing son and two suitcases.”  There is a new life in California: a life of flea markets and junior college, rides along the coast road, a childless marriage, and the death of the exhausted Baba.  Then, in his late thirties, Amir returns to Pakistan to visit his ailing childhood mentor, Rahim Khan.  Here the emotional intensity of the novel picks up again, several notches.  Amir embarks on another, more dangerous journey back to his homeland, to rescue one of the “broken children” of Kabul, during the Taliban regime.  Finally, back in his adopted home, flying a kite in the park, there is a glimpse – a hope – of redemption.

There are scenes of sharp beauty: the first day of snowfall in Kabul, with the sky “seamless and blue”; kites falling from the sky “like shooting stars.”  There is also grinding cruelty: a horrific half-time interval at a football match in the Taliban’s Kabul, and the agony of a father whose son suffocates in the fuel tank of the truck driven across the border.

Hosseini is a wonderful, unsentimental story-teller.  Like many first novels, there are autobiographical touches.  Like the author, young Amir immerses himself in Persian poetry and translations of Western novels; like the author, he becomes an expatriate in California, where he writes his first novel.  While Hosseini’s language is at times abrupt and simple, the emotion it expresses is pure, sometimes harsh, and goes straight to the heart – or perhaps more aptly, to the stomach.

Amir is an unworthy hero; but we also desperately hope that, in the words of Rahim Khan, “there is a way to be good again.”  And, with Amir, we are haunted by the sweet, round face of the devoted Hassan, with his slanting green eyes, and a small scar on his upper lip: “For you, a thousand times over.”

Author Note: Khaled Hosseini was born in Kabul, Afghanistan in 1965.  His father was a diplomat, his mother a high school teacher.  In 1976, his father was posted to Paris; in 1979, Afghanistan experienced a communist coup and the Soviet invasion.  The family was granted asylum in the United States, and moved to San Jose, California.  Hosseini studied Biology at the University ofSanta Clara and obtained a medical degree in 1993 from the University of San Diego.  He completed his residency at Cedars-Sinai Hospital in Los Angeles and during his internship began writing “The Kite Runner.”  It was published with much acclaim in 2003 – the same year he visited Kabul for the first time in 27 years.  There are now 8 million copies of “The Kite Runner” in circulation worldwide.  It has been adapted into a film, released in 2007.  In 2006 Hosseini was named a Goodwill Envoy for the United Nations High Commission on Refugees.  “A Thousand Splendid Suns,” his second novel, was published in May and also became an immediate bestseller.

Scene from the 2007 film "The Kite Runner"
Hassan (Ahmad Khan Mahmoodzada) and Amir (Zekiria Ebrahimi) in a scene from the 2007 film "The Kite Runner"
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8 thoughts on “The Kite Runner by Khaled Hosseini

      1. Oh, that’s great! I reviewed his second and third novels too. I very much enjoyed the third one. Second was a little too sentimental for me… I would love to read your review when it’s published. PS Thanks for following my blog…

        Liked by 1 person

    1. Yes, actually I enjoyed “And the Mountains Echoed” the most out of his three novels – I read it too and really should do a review of it sometime. It had so many interesting characters!

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