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Khaled Hosseini: The Kite Runner

I read the book about a year ago and i still think about. Everytime i read a book i found myself comparing it with The Kite Runner and i have no idea why but The Kite Runner most always wins.

Now i know there is books out there with more emotion, but this book just for me stuck. I can't no matter how hard i try forget it. I would recomend this book not because it's a top seller but because it gives you a true appreciation for what you have.
 
I really enjoyed this book. Some of it was predictable of course, but it was an easy read and a good yarn, and provoked some good discussion at the Bookworms reading group I'm a member of - in fact, it scored the best score of all the books we've read so far (which admittedly isn't that many as we're new to this!).

I'd give it 4/5.
 
I Finished this book 2 months ago .. I Still think about it :) ..
Its awesome *.*
I Loved it and thats all that matters lol :D
Highly Recommended =]
 
The Kite Runner is an easy read. The narration is straight forward and the story wavers between interesting and predictable.

The novel is about a boy who has to come to terms with his conscience. A mistake which he made in his childhood continues to haunt him well into his adulthood. At a later stage of his life, he is at the same crossroads again. He has to make a choice to either clear his conscience or probably save his own life.

There were no glitches while reading, as in, I didn’t find any reason to put down the novel. But, now that I have finished reading it, I don’t feel good about it. There are many problems with the novel; the story has many plot holes, the characters are unbelievable, the language is bland. The author wastes no ink in description. The narration is to the point - the story moves with every word of the novel.

Khaled Hosseini creates characters which lack depth and which come across as totally unrealistic. The protagonist, Aamir, has a servant named Hasan. The servant is shown as extremely obedient, to such an extent that it made me wonder, can anyone be so obedient? Obedience comes with age. If you are old enough to realize the difference between a master and a servant, then obedience makes sense. A two year old kid who is learning to speak will not take his master’s name out of obedience, will he? I find such obedience from a ten year old unrealistic, forget a two year old.

Hosseini has tried to evoke sympathy for his characters, but he fails at this. None of the characters have my sympathy. I hate Aamir for being such a weakling (the author expects readers to hate him) and Hasan for extreme obedience which is hard to digest. The relationship between Aamir and his father is questionable. They didn’t have a healthy relationship initially and all of a sudden they are on good terms. This didn’t go down my throat easily.

The narration is in first person, in Aamir’s point of view. The narration changes its style as the narrator grows older. Be it the choice of words, or the thoughts of the narrator, there is a visible change in the narration. This, I feel, is hard to achieve and the author manages to do it with ease.

There are parts which touched me. The childhood part is engaging. I was reminded of my own childhood days. The part where Aamir witnesses the incident and his immediate reaction, his mental tussle, his trauma are well described. This was the most gripping part of the novel.

With all its plus and minus points, in the end, this novel is a let down. With such importance given to the incident and its after-effects and the severance of ties between Aamir and Hasan, the reader expects to have confrontation of Aamir with Hasan. This does not happen. This was a let down for me. The author builds up enough tension for this confrontation and suddenly decides not to have one. Sigh, wish he hadn’t.

Pick it up if you have a few days to spare. You might relate to few incidents better than I did. Though I do not recommend this book highly, neither would I stop someone from reading it.
 
I was given a list of books by my teacher and I had to choose one book and read it for the 4 - 7 th of September. I choose the Kite Runner after reading a fair amount of reviews on it. However, I haven't started and it is imperative that I don't break the deadline. For those of you who have read the book, how long did it take you? I planning definately on buying the book tomorrow and starting it immediately. I'm not the slow kind of reader but i don't read at lightening speeds.
 
It's quite a quick read, so you shouldn't have too many problems with it. But as SFG75 says, there's another thread on it, which should have more info. :)
 
Thank you Stewart!

It's refreshing to find someone swiming the wrong way.
I didn't like the book ether,first of all the main caractere was getting on my nerves very quickely,with all his excuses,and self pity.As a all the story sounded phony,and the end with the big coencidence!!

Well Stewart say it much more accuretly than me

The only part i like is the actual kite fight,living in India a few years it bring back memories.In Rajasthan ,Jaipur all the kids where running everywhere,loking at the sky,you'd better be carfull driving!!

I have notice those big waves with some book,i don't know if you remenber the alchimist de Paolo Cuelho-that one pseudo mystical_women magazin books_Leo the african by amin Maalouf was a tousands time better.

Still i have to lie to my mother about the kite runner,saying sort of like it,dear mum she so sentimental
 
I recently finished reading this book as well and thought it was very good. The writing was exceptional and vivid. The story was powerful, upseting and at times ironic. It was refreshing to see a book written about a part of the world so often reported in the news but that most of us know so little about. I am looking forward to reading A Thousand Splendid Suns next.
 
Running Kites

A friend put the book in my hands and ordered me to read it. I loved it and consider her someone who knows me well.

I think entering the country in a way that is shaped around the story of a child is truly wonderful. THe writing is lush and poetic which is jolting when considering the subject matter.

A future classic, perhaps?
 
Reading Another Culture

Perhaps I am naive but when I read a book about another culture whether it's in translation or in English I find myself looking for information about that culture and the people and then think about the story and the characters.

I try not bring my US mindset to a novel where I am 'a stranger in a strange land.' With THE KITE RUNNER I was swept along by the place, the caste system and the customs. I didn't ask how a man and his son can be so passively enslaved because 1)in that culture it's obvious not unusual and 2)slaves have been a part of the human condition from the earliest days of homosapians. I found it very sad.

If any of you have read THE GOOD EARTH by Pearl S. Buck (she won a NOBEL PRIZE) one of the first AMericans and obviously a woman to enter China and write about their family woes, their poverty, their slavery etc.
It's not a long book. But it is a classic and no one has captured the China of that time the way she did.

As for Dan Brown winning the Nobel Prize?
That of course is a joke lol lol lol.
 
The part of the kite contest was the best in the book.I truly and deeply disliked the main caractere from the start,and didn't belived a segond in the redemption part.More than the book,the mind of writer transpiring in the book was repulsive to me,self indulgent and lame.
But i said it before,my dear mother loved this book so it can't be that bad!

As for slavery,we allway's presente the caricature of it.I know a good few slave in our moderne society(close friends!),there masters have many names,and there chain are not of steel but their freedom is near nil so entangle they are in lives of many rules.
 
I have just finished reading the Kite Runner. I would give it 3 stars because I found the first part when the boys were growing up in Kabul interesting.

However the second part of the book I felt was contrived, and I think that Amir, acted out of character. I kept reading because I wanted to finish the book and not from any desire to find out what happened next.

I felt the same way. The first part gave me the most reading pleasure. Once the story moved to America I slowly started losing interest and, like you, read to the end because I wanted to know what happened and not because the book kept me riveted.
 
I agree with Stewart. The book started with promise but proceeded to become almost farcical.
The part where Amir returns to save the boy is far fetched and too coincidental to be taken seriously.

I would give it 3 stars but have never recommended it to anyone.
 
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