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Courageousness In The Kite Runner By Khaled Hosseini

Decent Essays

In the attention-grabbing book, The Kite Runner by Khaled Hosseini, which is about an Afghan boy, Amir, growing up and dealing with the pain of mistakes and unfortunate circumstances. Amir manages to hide his wrong doings until he receives a call from an old friend. Amir moves out of Afghanistan in his late teenage years with his father Baba, a man who is courageous and hard to satisfy, not bringing much with him besides a few clothing items and a whole lot of guilt for abandoning his friend Hassan. To redeem himself, Amir travels back to Afghanistan as an adult facing challenges such as violence and lack of courage to save his nephew and bring him to safety. Amir channels Baba’s courageousness when fighting with Assef, which then allows Amir to relieve the guilt he struggles with during the story. Baba’s actions clearly display his undeniable traits of courage and dissatisfaction in the first half of the book. The fact that Baba is a strong and heroic man is easily identified by the reader at the beginning of the book especially when a soldier requests to rape a wife as the price for the truck passing through when Baba and Amir are escaping Afghanistan; however, Baba stands up to the soldier saying, “Tell him I'll take a thousand of his bullets before I let this indecency take place” (Hosseini 82). It is necessary for Hosseini to portray Baba as a courageous character because it introduces the theme of guilt early when Amir lacks courage and feels poorly about

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