Topic > Intertextuality in The Kite Runner - 1299

These possibilities are an interesting interpretation for this part of The Kite Runner, because Amir explains that, although he is sorry, he is not sorry enough to run out into the rain and apologize. Perhaps because the rain never touches it, it cannot be purified. Instead, I think Khaled Hosseini uses the rain as a narrative device to suggest crying, to suggest how much Amir will miss his best friend. Or perhaps it is simply used to imply the suffering Amir will endure for betraying Hassan. Come to think of it, Amir was unaware of what he had, he was too blind to realize that Hassan was a true friend who respected him. In The Kite Runner, the main character Amir was blind himself. He was not physically blind, but metaphorically blind. Amir was blind to the truth about the important things in his life and the place he called home. He was blind to the happiness he aspired to. I personally think that Hosseini created a character like Amir to show us a person who lacked his sight but slowly regains it as the story continues to develop, to show the reader that "there is a way to be good again". (2) Amir was unaware that he could receive anything he wanted due to his father's wealth and popularity. Amir managed to receive things like nothing, while members of the beloved country he called his home had to work hard to receive things of value. Hosseini begins The Kite Runner with a character who is blind to what happens in the “real world.” He lives much of his life thinking that the town he grew up in was a place he would be proud to call home, but as he grows older and time passes, he learns more and more about the terrible things about his homeland that were hidden from him. him for many years. This is just one of the examples in the novel