The Kite Runner

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Doubleday Canada, Feb 24, 2009 - Fiction - 400 pages
The #1 New York Times bestselling debut novel that introduced Khaled Hosseini to millions of readers all over the world.

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 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 divide Afghanistan further. An unspeakable assault on Hassan by a gang of local boys tears the friends apart; and 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 ways in which we’re damned by our moral failures, and of the extravagant cost of redemption.
 

Selected pages

Contents

Section 1
1
Section 2
3
Section 3
13
Section 4
26
Section 5
38
Section 6
51
Section 7
63
Section 8
85
Section 13
214
Section 14
226
Section 15
236
Section 16
240
Section 17
255
Section 18
271
Section 19
286
Section 20
307

Section 9
107
Section 10
151
Section 11
175
Section 12
205
Section 21
326
Section 22
362
Copyright

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About the author (2009)

Khaled Hosseini was born in Kabul, Afghanistan, the son of a diplomat whose family received political asylum in the United States in 1980. He lives in northern California, where he is a physician. The Kite Runner, his first novel, is being published around the world.

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