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  1. While Khaled Hosseini has said before that his first novel is largely fictional, he acknowledges that the Afghanistan he knew as a child inspired it. Like his main character, Amir, Khaled Hosseini enjoyed Western films and kite fighting.

    • The Kite Runner

      The Kite Runner is set against the backdrop of political...

  2. Khaled Hosseini regards him as a flat character in terms of development; he is "a lovely guy and you root for him and you love him but he's not complicated". [17] After Assef assaults him, this causes Hassan and Amir's relationship to deteriorate, culminating with Hassan leaving.

    • Khaled Hosseini
    • 2003
  3. Jun 21, 2012 · Novelist Khaled Hosseini came to the United States as a 15-year-old Afghan asylum seeker who knew only a few words of English. Today, he is a doctor, a United Nations goodwill ambassador, and...

  4. 2 days ago · Khaled Hosseini (born March 4, 1965, Kabul, Afghanistan) is an Afghan-born American novelist who is known for his vivid depictions of Afghanistan, most notably in The Kite Runner (2003). Hosseini grew up in Kabul; his father was a diplomat and his mother a secondary-school teacher.

    • The Kite Runner Started as A Short Story Inspired by News reports.
    • Hosseini Wrote The Novel in The Mornings Before Going to work.
    • September 11th and The War in Afghanistan Piqued Interest in The Novel.
    • The Character of Hassan Was (Subconsciously) Based on A Real person.
    • Hosseini Was Criticized by Some Afghans For How He Portrayed Afghanistan.
    • Hosseini Didn’T Think The Kite Runner Would Make A Good Film.
    • The Kite Runner Has Also Been Adapted Into A Graphic Novel.
    • The Kite Runner Is Often Banned Or challenged.
    • Hosseini Would Make Extensive Edits to The Kite Runner now.

    In 1999, Hosseini was watching the news when he saw a story about the Taliban banning kite flying in Afghanistan. The report “kind of struck a personal chord for me, because as a boy I grew up in Kabul with all my cousins and friends flying kites,” he told RadioFreeEurope. He wrote a 25-page short story—which “became this kind of a much darker, mor...

    Hosseini came to the United States as a refugee in 1980 after a communist coup in his home country of Afghanistan. He was just 15 years old and only knew a few words of English. He and his family settled in California, and though Hosseini wanted to be a writer, “it seemed outlandish that I would make a living writing stories in a language I didn’t ...

    In an interview with Salon, Hosseini said that he was challenging himself to write a novel with The Kite Runner. Then, after 9/11, “my wife really started talking to me about submitting a novel. I was reluctant at first, but eventually I came around to her way of looking at it, which was that this story could show a completely different side of Afg...

    When Hosseini was a child growing up in Afghanistan, he struck up a friendship with a Hazara man who worked for his family; the man taught Hosseini how to fly kites, and Hosseini helped teach him how to read. Readers of The Kite Runner might notice some similarities between that man and Hassan—also a servant belonging to the Hazara people, a large ...

    Hosseini told The Atlanticin 2013 that he had heard from “older, more conservative, religious members of my community” that his books “have somehow blemished the reputation of Afghanistan in Western eyes.” But he doesn’t see it that way, and doesn’t think his Western readers do either. “Most readers have come away with a sense of empathy for Afghan...

    The Kite Runner was adapted into a 2007 film directed by Marc Forster with a screenplay by David Benioff—but Hosseini wasn’t always sure his book would actually make a good film. “I had my doubts,” he told Rotten Tomatoes . “I always felt a lot of the novel is internal, the push and pull inside Amir’s mind.” Those doubts were assuaged by Benioff’s ...

    In 2011, a graphic novel version of The Kite Runner hit shelves. Hosseini told Book Passagethat his Italian publisher approached him with the idea, which he jumped at because he’d been a fan of comics as a kid; Fabio Celoni and Mirka Andolfo created the illustrations, and the author himself adapted the text. “The aim was to use the existing dialogu...

    The Kite Runner has shown up onthe American Library Association’s list of frequently challenged books four times since it was published—in 2008, 2012, 2014, and 2017—for reasons ranging from “offensive language” to “unsuited to age group” to “it was thought to ‘lead to terrorism’ and ‘promote Islam.’” “Books remain our most powerful teachers of emp...

    It’s probably true that every writer looks back on their previous work and finds at least a few things they’d change, and Hosseini is no exception. In speaking to The Guardian about The Kite Runner and A Thousand Splendid Suns, Hosseini said the booksseemed like “the work of somebody younger than me,” adding, “I think if I were to write my first no...

  5. Khaled Hosseini Biography. Khaled Hosseini is born in Kabul in 1965 and is the oldest of five children. His father is a diplomat for the Afghan Foreign Ministry, and his mother is a high school teacher.

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  7. Oct 21, 2014 · Khaled Hosseini’s books present harrowing individual stories set against the recent brutal history of Afghanistan. He talks to Razia Iqbal about how he feels compelled to tell stories, his...