This
novel was one of those relatively recent ones that slipped through
the cracks for me, like Cloud Atlas.
I heard about it in passing, but that was all.
And
then, something recently reminded me that I wanted to read Hosseini's
debut novel, and I'm glad I did. The Kite Runner
was, for me, a way in to the "history" of my own time, if
you will. In other words, I was in college when the U.S. bombed
Afghanistan, leading to over a decade of war, but wrapped up in my
own reality of college life and grad school applications, I paid
scant attention to the news. My mom would tell me about world events
over the phone, and I'd watch TV when I was home on break, but that
was about it. Afghanistan and Iraq seemed beyond distant to me.
What did draw me into trying to understand what was happening in Afghanistan was a National Geographic article about the Taliban's destruction of massive Buddhist statues. Later, I read a different article about the plight of Afghanistan's museums and the measures taken to preserve and protect priceless artifacts. Art, therefore, was my way in. I was so indignant (still am) that anyone would destroy old works of art- something I had felt even when learning about Europe's destruction during WWII.
The Kite
Runner, though, opened up
another door to the turmoil in Afghanistan. As many books do, this
one sent me to the encyclopedia to look up the history of Hosseini's
native country (I focused on
the 19th and 20th centuries). This was information I never received
in school. I could then read The Kite Runner
with the help of context, and try to begin to understand the ethnic
and political tensions that make up and divide that country
(something all nations struggle with). Further, the
narrative arc was perfect for telling a story in which past and
present intermingled freely.
This
story about family, guilt, redemption, and exile reminds me a lot of
a more recent novel, Night in Shanghai,
which also blends a story of individuals struggling against outside
forces, and on a large scale, the toll that war takes on people. The
scope of these issues, though, begs for a much longer novel,
something massive enough to explore the many facets of conflict and
human nature (i.e. something Tolstoy-long). Of course, neither novel
tried to be an epic tale encompassing a gazillion characters, but the
blending of historical events and fictional characters always, to me,
calls for something grand. Nonetheless, The Kite Runner
was beautifully written and has sparked my interest in Hosseini's
subsequent novels.
I have The Kite Runner and A Thousand Splendid Suns sitting on my kindle, waiting to be read. I just didn't have time to read it yet. I'm being sent And The Mountains Echoed for review and now I wish I read them. Guess I'll have to start with the latest and then read the other two. I'm glad you liked it though!
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