Two Kites and Two Kabuls
By David Drury
A Review of The Kite Runner, Khaled Hosseini, Author
(This review is spoiler-free on plot details but includes some character descriptions and relationships)
We oversimplify nations and
generalize races. Our sadly simple news
and generalized views of the Muslim world are a great example. Khaled Hosseini’s remarkable novel about a young
boy in
The Kite Runner comes in pairs: two fathers, two sons, two classes, two religious sects, two wars, two countries, two cities, two decisions, two sins, two redemptions and eventually even the two kites for which the novel is named. The story is one of parallel lines that somehow cross with engaging but often tragic consequences. Amir’s father “Baba” is an important but distant business man. Their servant Ali is a sweet but polio-crippled man. Their servant’s son, Hassan, grows up as the boy’s best friend who would do anything for Amir. His life is lived in service and joy, and his attitude is summed up in his response to Amir’s requests: “For you, a thousand times.” Amir’s complicated feelings toward this servant boy—who is at once his best friend in the world and also the one who serves him breakfast—enable the book to probe into the emotions that everyone relates to but no one wants to face.
Hosseini’s tale has some
parallels to his own story, as he too grew up in
I immensely enjoyed this novel and would recommend it to any adult reader. The Kite Runner’s pages are very readable and the author takes us into a different world with the best intentions of an experienced tour-guide matched with the interpretation of a skilled poet. Two times in the novel I knew I was in the hands of a master. When cancer enters onstage the author describes the evil and complexities of the disease in just one line: “Like Satan, cancer has many names.” I was most amazed, but also thankful, that I needed to hear the descriptions of brutality and Islamic sacrifice in this book in order to truly understand what the Christianized phrase, “lamb unto slaughter” really means. Hosseini’s lamb resigned to its fate and duty will haunt and compel me for years to come.
Thanks for writing, Dr. Hosseini.
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Khaled Hosseini in a Bookstore…
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© 2006 by David Drury
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