Kite runner by Khaled HosseiniThis is a featured page

Kite runnerTwelve year old Amir is desperate to gain the approval of his father and resolves to win the local kite-fighting tournament, to prove that he has the makings of a man. His loyal friend Hassan promises to help him - for he always helps Amir - but this is 1970's Afghanistan and Hassan is merely a low-cast servant who is jeered at in the street, although Amir feels jealous of his natural courage and the place he holds in his father's heart.

But neither of the boys could foresee what would happen to Hassan on the afternoon of the tournament, which was to shatter their lives. After the Russians invade and the family is forced to flee to America, Amir realises that one day he must return, to find the one thing that his new world cannot grant him: redemption.

Voted Book of the Year 2006 by Cosham Reading Group.

If you would like to review this book, please leave a comment below.


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digestivereader Wow factor ten 1 Jul 28 2007, 4:54 AM EDT by Anonymous
Thread started: Jul 27 2007, 1:02 PM EDT  Watch
Sometimes i am lucky enough to come across a book that has the same effect on me as chocolate. It is a a mind altering substance that can be digested anytime ,anywhere, anyplace and always makes me feel better. This is such a book. First of all I was transported to a country, that to my mind was the 'enemy ' where only extremeists lived and bombed other people for no other reason than they could. This book showed me that people like you and me livedin this country and through no fault of their own and drawn into confilict after conflict. They try tas best they can to survive in horrifc circumstances and cultures that demand men to be men never mind the invisible women. One to broaden the horizons and open your eyes to a part of world that gets such a bad press.
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