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    Ronny Yaya English 11 The Kite Runner Essay April 21‚ 2011 “Hell is yourself and the only redemption is when a person puts himself aside to feel deeply for another person.” Amir‚ the main character in Khaled Hosseini’s The Kite Runner‚ has an entire life full of guilt and full of lack of attention. Amir always feels as if he has to work for his father’s appreciation. Amir strives to redeem himself by trying to prove his abilities to his father‚ by searching punishment‚ and by always wanting

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    The Kite Runner – Khaled Hosseini Chapter one Is set in December 2001 when Amir the narrator is living in San Francisco. He recalls an event that occurred in 1975 which happened in Afghanistan where he grew up. He doesn’t go into detail about what happened but says what happened there made him who he is today. Amir gets a call from a friend named Rahim Khan who asks Amir to come to Pakistan to visit him. When Amir gets off the phone he walks along golden gate park‚ when he sees to kites which reminds

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    to the Pashtun. Like Hassan was to Amir and Baba. ​Amir the main character and novel narrator is of the Pashtun religion and because of this he is accustomed to having the things he wants handed to him on a silver platter. The only things Amir feels deprived of is a deep connection both emotionally and figuratively with his father Baba. He blames it on himself because he is so different than Baba in so many ways. He also feels responsible for the death of his mother who died during Amir’s birth

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    ENG4U Role of Fathers in The Novel A bond so cherished and sought after‚ may not always be one of love‚ but one filled with pain and longing. The relationship between a father and a son helps prepare a boy to understand right from wrong. Khaled Hosseini in‚ The Kite Runner‚ uses the complex emotional bond between fathers and sons to demonstrate the necessity of an empathetic fatherly figure. The relationships that clearly demonstrate this need for a fatherly figure are between Baba and Amir‚ Hassan

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    because of a potentially fatal suicide attempt. Many people would say‚ because of this quote‚ that Amir is not worthy of forgiveness. This makes Amir‚ the main character in Khaled Hosseini’s novel The Kite Runner‚ not worthy of forgiveness. There are many examples of Amir being selfish in the novel which proves that he is not worthy of forgiveness. When Amir was a kid his half brother‚ Hassan‚ was raped by Assef. This event left Hassan scarred and caused him to stay distant from everyone. Amir

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    A Thousand Times Over The Kite Runner by Khaled Hosseini is inundated with the phrase “for you a thousand times over” (2) and it plays a major role in the life of the main character‚ Amir. The quote is present in his youth‚ as he grows and during a moment that greatly influences the man he becomes. Over time the saying “for you a thousand times over” (2) fills Amir with first internal anguish‚ then guilt‚ and finally what he needs‚ healing. Amir is riddled with mental anguish as a young boy when

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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 (Symbol of Kite) One kite‚ ties with one unique and detached friendship. In Khaled Hosseini’s novel “The Kite Runner”‚ the blue kite represents the friendship between Amir and Hassan and also the relationship between Amir and Baba‚ his father. From the beginning of the story‚ this unique friendship between Amir and Hassan has been foreshadowed‚ “Then he would remind us that there was a brotherhood between people who had fed from the same breast‚ a kinship that not even time

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    tree. He would take the mirror and tell us what his mother had told him‚ that the devil shone mirrors too‚ shone them to distract Muslims during prayer. "And he laughs while he does it‚" he always added‚ scowling at his son. "Yes‚ Father‚" Hassan would mumble‚ looking down at his feet. But he never told on me. Never told that the mirror‚ like shooting walnuts at the neighbor’s dog‚ was always my idea. (2.2-3) This passage shows up early in the novel and really tells us quite a bit about Amir

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    Dorothy Campbell M.A.L.S. Essay The Kite Runner by Khaled Hosseini This essay will discuss the central themes of the book The Kite Runner‚ by Khaled Hosseini. Because the story is told at a time before the War on Terror‚ it brings the reader back to an Afghanistan the average American never knew existed and presents the current socio-economic reality of a United States one may choose to ignore. The description of Afghanistan before its many "occupations" is a tragedy in itself. The Author

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