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Symbolism Of Kite Running By Khaled Hosseini

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Kali Denney
Mr. Snyder
AP Literature and Composition
11 December 2015
Symbolism of Kite Running In this essay the book being discussed is, Kite Runner by Khaled Hosseini. Khaled Hosseini’s biography will be discussed as well as the historical influences upon him that affect the novel as a whole. The essay will contain a critical analysis as well as an analysis of the critical response to the work by others.
In the novel and now a grown man, the main character Amir recalls events in his childhood that shaped the man he is today and the situation he is in. He goes all the way back to his childhood directly before and during the time political turmoil arose in Afghanistan. Amir describes his life with his Baba, Hassan, and Ali in Kabul until the Soviet Union invaded, forcing Amir and Baba to move to Pakistan and later the United States. After moving to the United States Amir finds a wife and begins his own life until he receives a call from Rahim Khan. Khan tells Amir that his childhood friend Hassan was killed, was actually his half-brother, and his son needed to be saved from an orphanage. Amir then makes it his mission to save Sohrab and later kite runs with him just like he used to with Hassan.

1. Khaled Hosseini
Khaled Hosseini was born on March 4, 1965 in Kabul, Afghanistan to a family that belonged to the upper-middle class. Hosseini was raised by his father who was a diplomat and his mother who taught Farsi and history. For the first five years of his life Hosseini

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