Khaled Hosseini talks about his global bestselling novel, The Kite Runner with a group of invited readers.
The book describes how the happiness of an afternoon's kite flying competition in late-1970s Kabul is broken when young Amir fails to help his best friend Hassan avoid a terrible incident. The effects on the duo's friendship are devastating. Over 20 years later, Amir returns to Afghanistan from America, determined to redeem himself.
Khaled
Hosseini explains the unequal relationship between the two boys that
lies at the heart of the novel, and how the reader has a sense of dread
and impending catastrophe as the story develops. He says that although
the West has a view of Afghanistan as a violent culture, he remembers
that for most of the twentieth century, Afghanistan was a peaceful
place, and that the West has exoticised Afghans as being 'warrior' like.


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