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The Kite Runner By Khaled Hosseini

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The Kite Runner was published May 29, 2003 by Khaled Hosseini, an author from Afghanistan that now lives in California. It won the Award for Best Original Score in 2007. Hosseini tells the story of Amir, a Pashtun kid who tries to maintain relationships between his best friend, who is a Hazara, and his father that shamefully accused him of killing his mother even though she was killed through childbirth. According to Hosseini, an important understanding to take away from this novel is that religion in Afghanistan played a large role in social groups and it damaged many families emotionally and physically.
Hosseini uses the story of Amir to illustrate how the religious profiling affects many families and friendships and how hard it was to maintain a healthy friendship with somebody who society looked down upon. For example, the character of Hassan, Amir 's best friend, is portrayed as lower than Amir because of something as simple as religion; “They called him "flat-nosed" because of Ali and Hassan 's characteristic Hazara Mongoloid features. For years, that was all I knew about the Hazaras, that they were Mogul descendants, and that they looked a little like Chinese people. School text books barely mentioned them and referred to their ancestry only in passing. Then one day, I was in Baba 's study, looking through his stuff, when I found one of my mother 's old history books. It was written by an Iranian named Khorami. I blew the dust off it, sneaked it into bed with me that

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