Compare And Contrast Essay On The Kite Runner

835 Words2 Pages

In the beginning, everything is fine; Amir and Hassan love to play with each other and they spend all their time together. During the kite fighting, they tackle a great obstacle of winning the big tournament, but then Hassan is sexually assaulted by Assef. This is a huge twist in the novel as Amir engages in conflict within himself and his father who sees him as a disappointment. At the same time, the Soviet Union invades Afghanistan and pushes Amir and his father out of the country to move to America. He graduates college and begins writing as a career, followed by meeting and marrying a woman. His father starts to accept him more and becomes a more likable character in the story and creates a resolution atmosphere, but then is called to Pakistan to meet with an old friend. Amir learns that Hassan is dead but had a son and is living in Kabul, Afghanistan, his home country that he wanted to forget and now is returning to. Sohrab, Hassan’s son, is kept in an orphanage, but is taken before Amir can make it to him. Amir traces him down inside of a house where is long-awaited rival, Assef, is waiting. After a final …show more content…

The author was born in the setting of Kabul, Afghanistan, and he made the novel as close as he could to his experiences which makes for a more realistic story. The first main realistic idea in the novel is kite fighting. In Afghanistan culture, particularly boys, kite fighting is seen as a serious matter. The novel portrays it in the same way, and in the article “For Afghan boys and men, kite fighting is a way of life”, Kirk Semple, a writer for The New York Times, explains, “This is war. The sole reason for kites, Afghans will tell you, is to fight them, and a single kite aloft is nothing but an unspoken challenge to a neighbor” (par. 5). There are a few instances in The Kite Runner where the book describes a glace between Amir and another character, and a brawl begins between the

Open Document