Saturday, February 10, 2007

 

The Kite Runner

The Kite Runner is a book I never would have read if it hadn't been suggested by Ann from At Home with Ann.

It's really not my kind of book. I'm not really into conventional character-driven dramas, and I almost never read novels that have been written in the past 20 years. When I read novels, it's usually science fiction or "classics." And to be honest, the book didn't really pull me in at first. I might have given up on it if I weren't for my obligations to the Lamest Contest Ever.

I'm really glad I stuck with it though. The Kite Runner is a powerful book; the kind of novel that sticks with you, probably forever. On one level, it's the story of a friendship between two boys. On another level, it's the story of modern Afghanistan. The threads of the two stories are interwoven expertly, and parallel each other in many ways. Both threads are tragic, but both end on a note of cautious hope.

The story begins in the 1970s, when Afghanistan is a poor but beautiful, peaceful and cultured country. The protagonist is Amir, a young boy who lives a sheltered life as the son of a prominent Afghani. Hassan, the son of his father's servant, is Amir's best friend. Because Hassan is a Hazara, one of Afghanistan's underclass, Amir cannot openly acknowledge his friendship with Hassan. The result is a one-sided relationship in which Amir cherishes and relies upon Hassan while simultaneously disdaining and disavowing him.

At the same time, Amir struggles to gain the approval of his father, who doesn't understand his unathletic, bookish son. An opportunity to endear himself to his father arises in a kite-fighting contest. He believes -- with good reason -- that if he wins the contest, he will garner his father's respect and love. Amir becomes so obsessed that when he is unexpectedly thrust into a situation where he must choose between this goal and his friendship for Hassan, he betrays his friend.

From this point, things go rapidly downhill for both Hassan and Afghanistan. You're probably at least a little familiar with the travails of Afghanistan: First the Russians invaded, which was bad enough. But when the Russians left the Taliban took over. The Taliban makes the Russians look like the Mormon Tabernacle Choir. After reading this book, I am hard pressed to think of a group that embodies evil more purely than the Taliban. Honestly, I don't think even the Nazis measure up. Occasionally I hear people use the term "American Taliban" to refer to the religious right in this country. I'm not fan of the religious right, but with all due respect, people who use the term "American Taliban" in this way are f***ing retards. Read this book. If you think Pat Robertson measures up to this level of depravity, then you should be in therapy.

Amir and his father eventually flee to the U.S. (the East San Francisco Bay area, to be specific -- about an hour from where I live). But Afghanistan -- and his betrayal of Hassan -- continue to haunt him, and in the book's final act he finally has an opportunity to "be good again." The final few chapters are so riveting and haunting that you won't be able to put it down.

I don't want to give you the impression that this is a "political" book. It's not at all. It's the story of a young boy who becomes a man against the backdrop of the unfolding tragedy of Afghanistan. I highly recommend it.

Comments:
I think I'm with you on 'character-driven' drama, unless by that you mean characters driving fast cars creating drama with powerful handguns.

That said, The Kite Runner sounds like a worthwhile read. I'll try and pick it up and blog on it over at my blog after I've read it.

Glad to hear you've started GEB: An Eternal Golden Braid. Feel free to complain about the length, at, well, length. Hope you like it otherwise though. I look forward to hearing your comments.

-wolfe
 
Great review! I loved this book, too. And I agree, it's an eye-opener about all that's happened in Afganistan, and of course I knew nothing about the kite-flying culture. That part was very interesting.
I had family in Hayward for many years, and loved being able to picture that area in my mind, too. The contrast between the two parts of the book (Amir's life in Afganistan, then the US) was important to me, too. Especially what it meant for Amir's wife!
 
Thank you for reading it and for recommending it. This is one of the few books I have bought for other people and one of the few I have read again, still rapidly turning each page even though I knew the story. One of the areas that marked the book out for me was the fact that the central character was weak and even at the end, when the answer was staring him in the face, he almost missed the point.

I thought the writing was particularly beautiful and I am eagerly awaiting the author's next book.

On the heels of this one, I read The Bookseller of Kabul, a non-fiction genre, based on the findings of a journalist who stayed with a family in Afghanistan and told the story of how women are still treated in Afghanistan today. This writing was blunt and to the point in start contrast to the poetry of The Kiterunner.

In The Kiterunner the book was centred around the men of the families, both Amir and Hassan having lost their mothers in one way or the other.

On a final note, a questiion. Do you think the father illicitly slept with his friend's wife or do you think it was a tacit agreement knowing his friend could not father children?
 
Wow. I've heard so many good things about this book. Now I KNOW I have to go out and get it. I think it sounds like a great read.
 
I will definitely have to read this book. Thanks for the review!
 
Hey mister, you are way behind in your reading!!! :)
 
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