Amir then asks Sohrab to come back to the U.S. Amir and Sohrab escape and Amir recovers in Pakistan. The official then reveals himself as Assef, and he beats Amir with his brass knuckles until Sohrab shoots him in the eye with his slingshot. Amir (and his companion Farid) go to a soccer game, where at halftime the official they are looking for executes a man and woman.Īmir meets the official and the man calls in Sohrab, who has clearly been sexually abused. Amir agrees to go, and he finds the orphanage where Sohrab was supposed to be, but learns that a Taliban official took him away a month earlier. Rahim Khan asks Amir to go to Kabul and find Sohrab, saying this is Amir’s chance to “be good again.” He also reveals that Baba was Hassan’s true father. After Rahim Khan went to Pakistan he learned that Hassan and Farzana were executed by the Taliban, and Sohrab was sent to an orphanage. Rahim Khan says he had been watching Baba’s house for a while, but then found Hassan and convinced him and his wife Farzana to come back to Kabul. Once Amir arrives, Rahim Khan tells him about the horrors of the Taliban regime and war-torn Kabul. One day Amir gets a call from Rahim Khan, who is dying and asks Amir to come to Pakistan. Meanwhile, the Soviets are driven out of Afghanistan. Amir gets his first book published and he and Soraya start trying, unsuccessfully, to conceive. Baba is pleased with Amir’s marriage, and he dies a month later. General Taheri accepts, and Amir and Soraya get married soon after. Amir asks Baba if he will ask General Taheri to let him marry Soraya. Soon afterward Baba is diagnosed with lung cancer. After much delaying, Amir starts courting her. Baba and Amir sell things at a flea market, where Amir starts noticing Soraya, the daughter of Baba’s friend General Taheri. Baba works at a gas station and Amir finishes high school and then studies writing at college. They eventually make it to Pakistan, and months later move to Fremont, California. In 1981, Baba and Amir flee Kabul, which has been invaded by the Soviets. Baba forgives Hassan, but Ali and Hassan leave the household. He hides some money under Hassan’s mattress and tells Baba that he stole it, and Hassan doesn’t deny it. Amir is tormented by guilt, and he decides to make Hassan leave the house. Amir runs away, and later both he and Hassan pretend nothing has happened.Īmir and Hassan soon drift apart. Amir watches as Kamal and Wali hold Hassan down and Assef rapes him. When Amir goes after Hassan he finds him in an alley, trapped by Assef, Wali, and Kamal. ![]() Amir wins the tournament, and then Hassan goes to retrieve the losing kite. In the winter there is a big kite-fighting tournament where boys try to cut each other’s kites with glass-covered strings, and then “kite runners” chase after the fallen kites. One day three boys named Assef, Wali, and Kamal threaten Amir, but Hassan scares them away with his slingshot. Amir and Hassan fly kites and read stories together, though Hassan does chores while Amir goes to school. Amir feels he is a disappointing son to Baba, but he is close to Baba’s friend Rahim Khan. They have two Hazara (an ethnic minority) servants, Ali and his son Hassan, who is Amir’s closest playmate. "Smart and consistently humorous.The narrator, Amir, grows up in a luxurious home in Kabul, Afghanistan, with his father Baba. ![]() Shmoop is here to make you a better lover (of poetry) and to help you make connections to other poems, works of literature, current events, and pop culture. Best of all, Shmoop's analysis aims to look at a topic from multiple points of view to give you the fullest understanding.Įxperts and educators from top universities, including Stanford, UC Berkeley, and Harvard, have written Shmoop guides designed to engage you and to get your brain bubbling. This Shmoop Bestsellers Guide offers fresh analysis, a line-by-line close reading of the poem, examination of the poet's technique, form, meter, rhyme, symbolism, jaw-dropping trivia, a glossary of poetry terms, and more. Shmoop eBooks are like having a trusted, fun, chatty, expert poetry-tour-guide always by your side, no matter where you are (or how late it is at night). ![]() Shmoop's award-winning Bestseller Guides are now available on your Nook. Or grab a flashlight and read Shmoop under the covers. Dive deep into Kite Runner by Khaled Hosseini anywhere you go: on a plane, on a mountain, in a canoe, under a tree.
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