Khaled Hosseini: The Kite Runner

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Khaled Hosseini: The Kite Runner

Afghan born author Khaled Hosseini conveys a world of deep persecution and a violently divided society in Afghanistan through the novels he has written. These novels reveal the hardships of the people from Afghanistan through the pre-Taliban rule and this evidence is in his book the Kite Runner. To understand why Hosseini wrote this book one needs to know his personal life story. Hosseini was born in March 4, 1965 in Afghanistan, he spent five years of his childhood in Kabul. Hosseini is the oldest of five children. His family lived in Wazir Akbar Khan district of the city. His father worked for the foreign ministry and his mother taught Persian literature. As he grew up he was loving the treasures of classical Persian poetry. In 1973 the 200-year-old Afghan was overthrown. Daoud Khan, the king's cousin …show more content…

While he was in America, he was aware of the extremist Taliban seizing control over Afghanistan. Khaled wanted to let the world know what was happening and he felt terrible knowing all the awful activity his homeland was facing. He decided to expand his short stories into novels. His first novel was The Kite Runner. This book is set against decades in Afghanistan history. Including the monarchy in 1973, The Soviet invasion and the rise of the Taliban regime in the 1990s, which led the following invasion in September, 11, 2001, when terrorist attacked the United States ("Kite Runner Author Khaled Hosseini Is Born"). Hosseini was also influenced by the memories of peaceful pre-Soviet era Afghanistan, as well as of his personal experiences with Afghan Hazaras. Khan Hossein was a Hazara who worked for the Hosseini's when they were leaving in Iran. Khaled taught Khan how to read and write. Even though Khaled and Khan relationship was brief and formal Khaled always remember the fondness that developed between them ("Kite Runner (Hosseini) - Author

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