In
this week’s edition of On the Shelf comes the final post on Kite Runner.
Amir, now happily married to his wife Soraya for over 15 years, receives a
message from his old family friend Rahim Khan. Amir drops everything he is
doing in his life in America and hastily boards the next plane to Afghanistan.
When Amir finds Rahim he quickly discovers that the Afghanistan he knew when he
was a kid was destroyed after the Soviet invasion years earlier. After the Soviets
were driven out, the fundamentalist Taliban group seized control of the country
and with it the freedom of its people. The Taliban were responsible for the
execution of many of the ethnic minorities in the country, including Hassan. It
turns out that Hassan had a son during the Taliban occupation of Afghanistan
and after he and his wife were executed, the orphaned boy was placed in an
orphanage. Hassan’s child, Sohrab, was then removed from the orphanage by a
Taliban official who just so happened to be Assef, the rapist from earlier in
the book. Amir goes to rescue Sohrab from Assef and the two fist fight one on
one, Assef’s request to the Taliban guards. After Amir had his face physically reconstructed
by Assef’s fists, Sohrab manages to blind Assef with his father’s sling shot.
How fitting. The two escape the Taliban building and escape to Pakistan in
their getaway car. Once Amir has his face fixed by plastic surgeons in relative
safety, he begins the adoption process to adopt Sohrab and to bring him back to
America. The U.S. international adoptions agency is less than accommodating to
our beaten hero and Amir is forced to tell Sohrab that he will have to stay in
another dirty, foodless orphanage “only until we can sort this out.” Later that
night, Soraya saves the day by informing Amir that she found an international adoption
agency that will assist them in getting Sohrab home now and adopted later. Amir
tries to inform Sohrab of the turn of events only to find Sohrab lying in the
hotel bathtub with his wrists cut in an attempt to commit suicide. Luckily,
Sohrab survives the suicide attempt after Amir rushes him to the hospital and
Sohrab recovers physically, but never in spirit. Amir takes him home to America
where they live safely, but with an impenetrable barrier of silence holding the
family apart. The novel does end on a happier note when Amir takes Sohrab to
the park to fly a kite together and even fight another kite. His victory in
this kite fight brings all of Kabul back to Amir and shows Amir and Sohrab how
their love for Hassan has brought them together.
Monday, November 19, 2012
Tuesday, November 6, 2012
On the Shelf
This week I was unable to do as much reading as I would have
liked too. I have been fairly busy working after school and catching up on
school assignments. I was originally planning on finishing Kite Runner by this
time but I was unable to achieve this goal. So far, the story has progressed
through time fairly quickly, outlining the events between the infamous rape
scene and the move to America after the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan. Placing
light details of life in America upon the passage of time, it would appear as
if the move away from Afghanistan allowed Amir to forget his cowardice and
betrayal of his friend Hassan, creating a whole new life where his conscious
can finally rest easily. Eventually, Amir marries another fugitive from
Afghanistan in America. The day of his proposal to her, she reveals to him that
she has had ran away with a previous suitor, marring her purity as an Afghan
woman. Soraya’s betrayal of her father and the family name discreetly parallels
Amir’s betrayal of his ‘brother’ years before. Though Amir acknowledges he
should confess his inner incubus, he decides to withhold the information. Time
passes, and Amir’s father passes away from lung cancer and his old family
friend from Kabul, Afghanistan requests Amir visit him as he too is dying; Amir
boards a plane and returns to his home, reviving his suppressed childhood
demons.
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