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The Kite Runner Analysis

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When Khaled Hosseini wrote The Kite Runner, he made several important choices involving narration. He chose to write the story in first person from a limited point of view. This is a very fitting decision because, writing in the first person adds a sense of intimacy that is crucial to this story; writing from a limited perspective allows the reader to make their own conclusions about what the characters are thinking. The way Hosseini writes The Kite Runner makes it very intimate, and feels like a person telling their life story. If The Kite Runner had been written in third person, or omnisciently, the story would not have impacted readers as much, and would have been too cold and impersonal to create emotional connections with the reader. When Hosseini wrote Amir in The Kite Runner, he wrote in a very unreliable narrator, who only gains marginal reliability near the end of the book. Amir is unreliable as a narrator in the beginning of the book because he is a child. He is young, and as a result, probably remembers events incorrectly. Additionally, during the rape scene, twelve year old Amir retreats into his mind, so that he can block out the trauma that is taking place around him. In his mind, he remembers being told he and Hassan are connected; he remembers getting his fortune told with Hassan; and he dreams he is lost in a snow storm (Hosseini 75-76). Due to this, the reader must take everything he says with a grain of salt, since he was not fully present during this

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