The Kite Runner by Khaled Hosseini

BUY IT NEW

  • $29.95 Online price
  • $23.96 Member price
  • Join Now
  • skip to cart
  • Add To List uiAction=GetAllLists&page=List&pageType=list&ean=9781585473632&productCode=BK&maxCount=100&threshold=3

Usually ships within 24 hours

Delivery Time and Shipping Rates

FIND & RESERVE AN IN-STORE COPY

Enter a zip code

(Library Binding - Large Print Edition)

Reader Rating: (1010 ratings)

Detailed Rating: "Originality" See All

B&N Discover Great New Writers
  • Publisher: Center Point Pub
  • Pub. Date: November 2003
  • ISBN-13: 9781585473632
  • Sales Rank: 160,141
  • Edition Description: Large Print Edition
 
  • Overview
  • Editorial Reviews
  • Customer Reviews
  • Meet the Writer
  • Features
  • Full Product Details

Synopsis

“I sat on a bench near a willow tree and watched a pair of kites soaring in the sky. I thought about something Rahim Khan said just before he hung up, almost as an afterthought, ‘There is a way to be good again.’”

Now in paperback, one of the year’s international literary sensations — a shattering story of betrayal and redemption set in war-torn Afghanistan.

Amir and Hassan are childhood friends in the alleys and orchards of Kabul in the sunny days before the invasion of the Soviet army and Afghanistan’s decent into fanaticism. Both motherless, they grow up as close as brothers, but their fates, they know, are to be different. Amir’s father is a wealthy merchant; Hassan’s father is his manservant. Amir belongs to the ruling caste of Pashtuns, Hassan to the despised Hazaras.

This fragile idyll is broken by the mounting ethnic, religious, and political tensions that begin to tear Afghanistan apart. An unspeakable assault on Hassan by a gang of local boys tears the friends apart; Amir has witnessed his friend’s torment, but is too afraid to intercede. Plunged into self-loathing, Amir conspires to have Hassan and his father turned out of the household.

When the Soviets invade Afghanistan, Amir and his father flee to San Francisco, leaving Hassan and his father to a pitiless fate. Only years later will Amir have an opportunity to redeem himself by returning to Afghanistan to begin to repay the debt long owed to the man who should have been his brother.

Compelling, heartrending, and etched with details of a history never before told in fiction, The Kite Runner is a story of the waysin which we’re damned by our moral failures, and of the extravagant cost of redemption.

Annotation

The first novel about contemporary Afghanistan to be written in English, The Kite Runner reveals the beauty and agony of that tormented nation as it tells the story of an improbable friendship between two boys from opposite ends of society, and of the troubled but enduring relationship between a father and a son. Author Khaled Hosseini, now a physician in California, emigrated from Afghanistan to the United States as a young man two decades ago.The Kite Runner a saga of love, betrayal, and redemption begins in Kabul in the 1970s, shortly after the overthrow of the last Afghan king. Set on a broad canvas encompassing the communist coup d'état, the Soviet invasion, the rise of the Afghan freedom fighters or mujahadeen, and the early days of the Taliban, Hosseini's tale also portrays the Afghan community of exiles in America with unparalleled insight and deft wit. A striking and forceful literary debut by any standard, The Kite Runner is further distinguished by its singular and timely backdrop. The book was acquired by Riverhead Books in a pre-emptive bid in the Fall of 2002, and foreign rights for the novel have since been sold in Britain, Canada, Finland, France, Germany, Greece, Holland, Israel, Spain, and Sweden.

In 1975, Amir, the novel's narrator and central figure, is a twelve-year-old boy, blissfully unaware that his life is about to change forever. The son of one of Kabul's wealthiest and most admired businessmen, Amir spends hours playing and reading stories each day with his best friend, a hare-lipped boy named Hassan who is also his servant. Theirs is an unlikely friendship because of differences in ethnicity and religion as well as social standing. Amir, a member of the dominant Pashtun ethnic group, is a Sunni Muslim. Hassan belongs to the Hazara group, who are descended from the Mongols, and is a Shi'ite Muslim. Both left motherless in infancy, Amir and Hassan shared a wet nurse, and a brotherhood that Afghans believe is unique to those who have fed from the same breast-a kinship that not even time can break.

Amir idolizes Baba-his handsome, athletic, buoyantly self-confident father-but is not like him at all. Amir prefers his dead mother's poetry books to hunting and soccer. With the encouragement of Hassan and Baba's best friend, Rahim Khan, Amir discovers that he has a talent for telling and writing stories. All this proves to be a source of mystery and deep disappointment to Baba.

Yet there is one paper-thin slice of intersection between Amir and Baba's different spheres of existence: they both have a passion for the unofficial Afghan national sport of kite-flying. This is kite-flying not as westerners understand it, but a fierce competition whose goal is to knock your opponents' kites out of the sky by cutting their lines with your own, which is coated with ground glass. The second phase of the competition involves running down and capturing the fallen kites, and there is no better kite runner than Hassan. Amir dreams of winning Kabul's annual kite-flying tournament not only as a means of demonstrating his sporting prowess, but as a way to earn his father's respect and love. It is also an opportunity to advance himself in the unspoken rivalry he feels with Hassan for Baba's praise and attention. For Hassan, the event is simply another chance to show his pure devotion to Amir.

Amir manages to win the tournament and retrieve the last kite to fall, but only after he betrays Hassan in a manner that is unplanned and cowardly, abandoning the Hazara boy to a shocking and brutal fate. At some level, Amir even believes that Hassan was the price he had to pay to win Baba's love. After all, he was just a Hazara, wasn't he? Stricken with guilt, Amir shuns Hassan and poisons Baba's relationship with the young servant, so that Hassan is soon forced to leave their household.

The official end to the way of life Amir has known since birth comes in 1978 with the communist coup d'état, and further in 1979, when the Soviet invasion marks the start of an era of bloodletting that continues today. By 1981, Amir and Baba are fleeing to Pakistan with other refugees over treacherous mountain passes, inside the nauseating, airless tank of a fuel truck. As usual, Baba exhibits brash heroism, standing up to dishonest smugglers and thuggish Russian soldiers, while Amir shrinks back and can think only of his own base cowardice with Hassan.

A few years later, Amir and Baba are living in Fremont, California, where Baba is the day manager of a gas station. Amir graduates from high school, enrolls in a community college, and seriously begins to pursue his ambition of becoming a writer, against Baba's advice. For Baba, America is a place to mourn his memories, but for Amir it is a place to bury his. Tea, politics, and scandal are the regular ingredients of an Afghan Sunday at the flea market, where Amir and Baba have a stall selling used goods. One day at the flea market, Amir meets the stunning daughter of a supercilious Afghan general. As his relationship with Soraya - his Swap Meet Princess - and his career develop, Amir continues to wrestle with what he did to Hassan back in Kabul. Then, in 2001, he receives a haunting phone call from his father's old friend Rahim Khan, now dying in Pakistan. "There is a way to be good again," Khan says. But is there? And if so, how?

The Kite Runner is a skillfully crafted, lyrically-written epic of family, friendship, and love that recalls the great Russian novels of the nineteenth century. Moreover, its setting amid the past three decades of the history of Afghanistan has never before been presented in western fiction. Above all, Khaled Hosseini reminds us of the power of historical events beyond our control, and of choices that we each make every day, to change our lives in an instant.

San Jose Mercury News

...ranks among the best-written and most provocative stories of the year...enlightening and fascinating...intimate and poignant. (June 29, 2003)

More Reviews and Recommendations

Biography

Afghan-born physician Khaled Hosseini rises at 4:00 every morning to pursue his second career -- as buzz-worthy, bestselling author. His first effort, The Kite Runner, is "a vivid and engaging story that reminds us how long his people have been struggling to triumph over the forces of violence," reflects The New York Times.

More About the Author

Customer Reviews

Hold on to your seats and go for a ride.by Anonymous

Reader Rating:
See Detailed Ratings

July 04, 2009: This is a very gripping book. There is a scene that I do not feel in necessery to go into as much depth as it did. I must say for a reader of mainly romance novels this scene made me want to skip ahead.

Over all this is a great book that I have recommended and loned out. Give it a shot!

A "must-read" for all the reasons you can think of! A modern-day "To Kill A Mockingbiby Vermont-Reader-Lea

Reader Rating:
See Detailed Ratings

July 04, 2009: In spite of the many favorable reviews for this book, I was simply NOT PREPARED to be so caught up in the lives and actions of all the persons (I hesitate to call them 'characters' because they are depicted as real - living & breathing - persons). The interactions and experiences of childhood friends were skillfully depicted - and while never having been to Afghanistan, Iraq, or Iran - I could almost see, hear and touch everything in the story. A marvelous read. Right up there with To Kill A Mockingbird. This book will bring laughter and tears, and will leave a haunting thought of "if only ... ". The current events of today are brought to the forefront in the amazing writing of Hosseini's book. I found myself, more than once, thankful for the insight to the lives, customs, and traditions of the families in the book.


More Customer Reviews