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    the kite runner

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    Hosseini Khaled’s The kite Runner: Theme‚ Symbols‚ motifs‚ and Taliban Angela Ge Mr. Moore American Literature‚ 7th hour May 2nd‚ 2014 Angela Ge Mr. Moore American Literature‚ 7th hour May 2nd Hosseini Khaled’s The kite Runner: Theme‚ Symbols‚ motifs‚ and Taliban Khanled Hossini is an Afghan-born American novelist who is famous for his first novel‚ The Kite Runner. This novel was the No. 5 best seller in the New York Times‚ and was made to a movie in 2007. The Kite Runner expresses the theme

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    The Kite Runner

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    The Kite Runner Suffering is The state of undergoing pain‚ distress‚ or hardship. People can suffer in many ways such as physical‚ mental‚ and sometimes spiritual. The novel The Kite Runner takes place in Afghanistan and Khaled Hosseini wrote this novel. His novel about a guilt-filled child named Amir demonstrates true suffering. The characters in this book try to write the wrongs they have done and try to make piece with there suffering. Amir What is suffering to you? Suffering to me shows how

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    The Kite Runner by Khaled Hosseini - The Kite Runner by Khaled Hosseini 1. Amir is a Pashtun and Hassan is a Hazara. Pashtun ’s are some of the richest people in Afghanistan. The Pastuns have always been the upper class and the Hazaras belonged to the much lower class. They often worked for richer Afghanis‚ trying to get by on a meager living. The two remain on different levels primarily due to religion. The Pashtun ’s are Sunni Muslims‚ while the Hazara ’s are Shi ’a Muslims. The Sunni Muslims are

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    Kite Runner

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    The Kite Runner by Khaled Hosseini was published in 2003. Initially published by Riverhead Books‚ an imprint of Penguin‚ The Kite Runner was said to be the first novel written in English by an Afghan writer‚ and the book appeared on many book club reading lists. The novel is set in Afghanistan from the late 1970s to 1981 and the start of the Soviet occupation‚ then in the Afghan community in Fremont‚ California from the 1980s to the early 2000s‚ and finally in contemporary Afghanistan during the

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    The Kite Runner

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    The Kite Runner According to Maya Angelou‚ “History‚ despite its wrenching pain‚ cannot be unlived‚ but if faced with courage‚ need not be lived again.” This quote implies that history is permanent and it is simply impossible for one to change the past. As humans we make bad choices that we have to live with that can potentially haunt us later in life. The only way to change this reality is to foster a brave outlook on life. With a little courage and a clear conscience‚ one can make a better

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    The Kite Runner

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    The Kite Runner is a riveting book with a detailed plot and very intricate characters. The Kite Runner takes place in modern Afghanistan and tells a story about childhood friends‚ Amir and Hassan‚ whose friendship crumbles after one bad mistake. Amir spends the following years burdened with the guilt of his past‚ telling no one the real reason behind the failed friendship. The main character is Amir. Throughout the book Amir suffers with guilt‚ redemption‚ fear‚ and honor. He lives with the guilt

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    the kite runner

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    change the way we view the world around us‚ none more so than texts like Khaled Hosseini’s novel‚ The Kite Runner. The book is a retelling of an Afghani boy’s life‚ which addresses the issues of friendship‚ coming of age‚ and the power of the past can have on somebody. The Author’s way of addressing of these issues‚ has significantly shaped my own views‚ specifically how friendship can often be unequal‚ how coming of age can be based upon a specific event‚ and that the actions from the past can haunt

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    Themes in The Kite Runner “For you a thousand times over.” In Khaled Hosseini’s “The Kite Runner” Afghanistan is portrayed in a flashback of this family’s life. Baba and his son Amir lives in Kabul with their servants Hassan and Ali. Being that Hassan and Amir grew up together they have a very strong bond that is unbreakable under any circumstance or obstacles. In “The Kite Runner” there are three themes in the book‚ love‚ loyalty and guilt. First theme being love in “The Kite Runner”‚Baba had a

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    come: Friday afternoon in Paghman. An open field of grass speckled with mulberry trees in blossom. Hassan and I stand ankle-deep in untamed grass‚ I am tugging on the line‚ the spool spinning in Hassan’s calloused hands‚ our eyes turned up to the kite in the sky. Not a word passes between us‚ not because we have nothing to say‚ but because we don’t have to say anything – that’s how it is between people who

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    The Kite Runner

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    Leah VanLandingham Mrs. Fichtner AP English 4 September 2014 The Kite Runner Every man is called upon at least one time in his life to do something great. This task could be as small as giving back to the community or as large as saving a life. The man can either chose to be a coward and step down‚ or to step up and face the challenge along with any consequences it may come with. The characters throughout The Kite Runner‚ by Khaled Hosseini‚ had to face many challenges and were called upon

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