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    Kite Runner Essay

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    | Grade 11 University English ISU Essay | | 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

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    Redemption As we go through life we all make mistakes‚ how we deal with them shows more about us than the mistake its self. In The Kite Runner by Khaled Hosseini‚ Amir makes a huge mistake that he will struggle with for many years to come‚ until one day he gets a phone call telling him that “There is a way to be good again.” (Hosseini 2) After this he sets off on a journey to redeem himself. As we read‚ we realize that redemption is very difficult but possible to achieve. Some may have to do things

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    The Kite Runner Theme Essay Father-Son Relationship (Amir and Baba) Amir‚ who is the main character The Kite Runner‚ is a boy who always wanted the admiration and acceptance of his father‚ Baba. Baba and Amir cannot have the relationship Amir wants to have because of the characteristics that they have and do not share between each other. Amir wants to have Baba all to himself‚ and not share him with others‚ such as Hassan. Amir is weak in Baba’s eyes and Amir is not how Baba sees his son to be

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    fear of being hurt by Assef were the main reason he ran‚ Amir suggests that at least would have been more justified. Instead‚ he allowed the rape to happen because he wanted the blue kite‚ which he thought would prove to Baba that he was a winner like him‚ earning him Baba’s love and approval. The price of the kite‚ as Amir says‚ was Hassan‚ and this is why Amir calls Hassan the lamb he had to slay. He draws a comparison between Hassan and the lamb sacrificed during the Muslim holiday of Eid Al-Adha

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    The Kite Runner

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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

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    Today a group very similar to the Taliban‚ ISIS is the group that is feared. They occupy mainly Iraq and Syria‚ and their doctrine is an interpretation of sharia law. Like the Taliban in the kite runner‚ ISIS is also a military group that controls people through fear and death‚ believing this to be the word of God. The Afghans that fled to America remind me of the Syria refugees of today‚ just like in the novel they are trying to escape a war stricken

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    In the beginning of the novel‚ The Kite Runner‚ the main character experiences the struggles with the impact of guilt and regret. He faces the consequences of a decision he made as a twelve-year-old for the greater part of his life. Therefore‚ he must search for his path to redemption for the rest of the novel. In the beginning of the book‚ he was definitely a coward. He was not able to stand up for his best friend because he was scared of getting hurt. Even though Amir’s made a horrible decision

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    August 5‚ 2012 Themes of Oedipus the King "A theme is a main idea or subject explored in a literary work." One theme in Oedipus the King is the limits of freewill. This theme goes well with this book because when Oedipus tells Jocasta about the prophecy he heard of as a young boy‚ Jocasta tells him of a similar prophecy. Oedipus was told he would have to kill his father and sleep with his mother. Jocasta tells him that Lauis’ son will grow up to kill his father. As these prophecies are told

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    Kite Runner

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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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    Gena Narcisco Mrs. Sharpe Honors English 10 10/11/12 The Kite Runner Do you know that Afghanis play a game where they fight with kites? The Kite Runner by Khaled Hosseini describes kite fights between local Afghani kids‚ regardless of their social status. The main characters in this story that come from a higher socioeconomic level are Baba‚ a lawyer from the Pashtun tribe‚ and his son Amir. The main characters in this story that come from the lower socioeconomic level are Ali‚ a servant from

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