
The Kite Runner is the story of two boys - Hassan a Shi’a, Amir a Sunni; one from wealth, the other a servant - who grow up in Afganistan the best of friends, until one fateful day when Amir is twelve in the winter of 1975. What Amir witnesses changes the boys’ friendship forever, and sets events in motion which will have lifelong consequences.
Khaled Hosseini begins his novel in Afganistan, then takes the reader across the ocean to San Francisco where Amir and his father begin a new life as immigrants. A telephone call one day from his father’s old friend summons Amir back to an Afganistan which has changed - a place where Taliban soldiers patrol, where people are hung in the street or stoned to death during an intermission at a soccer game, and where children are no longer children. It is here where Amir must face his demons and where lies, betrayal and secrets will be uncovered.
This is a novel which explores many themes: family loyalty, the rigidity of religious division, the cruel effects of war, and the power of love and redemption. Hosseini’s writing is simple and powerful; a no frills, spare style which stuns. Readers should be warned - there are graphic scenes which involve child rape and molestation. The violence in the book is painful to read…and heartbreaking.
Earlier this year I read Hosseini’s second novel A Thousand Splendid Suns (reviewed here), and so comparisons between the two novels was inevitable. I thought Hosseini’s writing matured from the first book to the second, and A Thousand Splendid Suns affected me more strongly on many levels. Flaws with The Kite Runner include some plot twists which bordered on the unbelievable, and so parts of the book felt contrived to me.
Despite this, The Kite Runner is a impressive first novel which reveals the horror of what has happened, and continues to happen in Afganistan.
This is a book which leaves a lasting impression. Highly recommended.
The Afghan government banned the film because of a rape scene of a young boy and the ethnic tensions that the film highlights. "It showed the ethnic groups of Afghanistan in a bad light," Mubarez said. Din Mohammad Rashed Mubarez, the deputy minister of the Ministry of Information and Culture said: "We respect freedom of speech, we support freedom of speech, but unfortunately we have difficulties in Afghan society, and if this film is shown in the cinemas, it is humiliating for one of our ethnic groups."
The ACLU Foundation of Texas lists The Kite Runner on a list of banned or challenged books in Texas.
Farenheit 451 lists The Kite Runner as a banned book on its blog and at Library Thing.
4 comments:
I LOVED The Kite Runner. I could not put it down. I did not want it to be over. Still have not seen the movie, but thats fine. Books are always better anyway.
J.Danger: I haven't seen the movie either and I agree - the books are always better. Glad this was a keeper for you too!
I saw the book first and then read the book for my senior project and I loved them both! but you are right, books are better than movies!
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