J.G. Keely's Reviews > The Kite Runner

The Kite Runner by Khaled Hosseini
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it was ok
bookshelves: contemporary-fiction, novel, reviewed

This is the sort of book White America reads to feel worldly. Just like the spate of Native American pop fiction in the late eighties, this is overwhelmingly colonized literature, in that it pretends to reveal some aspect of the 'other' culture, but on closer inspection (aside from the occasional tidbit) it is a thoroughly western story, firmly ensconced in the western tradition.

Even those tidbits Hosseini gives are of such a vague degree that to be impressed by them, one would have to have almost no knowledge of the history of Afghanistan, nor the cultural conflicts raging there between the Shia and Sunni Muslims, or how it formed a surrogate battleground for Russia and the United States in the Cold War, or for Colonial conflicts in the centuries before. Sadly, for all the daily news reports about Afghanistan, most people know very little of its history.

Hosseini's story is thickly foreshadowed and wraps up so neatly in the end that the reader will never have to worry about being surprised. Every convenient coincidence that could happen, does happen. He does attempt to bring some excitement to the story with dramatized violence, but that's hardly a replacement for a well-constructed plot. He is also fond of forcing tension by creating a small conflict between two characters and then having them agonize over it for years, despite the fact that it would be easy to fix and the characters have no reason to maintain the conflict. And since the conflict does not grow or change over time, everything is quickly reduced to petty and repetitive reactions.

He even creates a cliched 'white devil' character, a literal sociopath (and pedophile) as the symbol for the 'evils' of the Taliban. This creates an odd conflict in the narrative, since one of the main themes is that simple inequalities and pointless conflicts stem from Afghan tradition, itself. His indelicate inclusion of wealthy, beautiful, white power as the source of religious turmoil in the mid-east negates his assertion that the conflicts are caused by small-mindedness.

The fact that this character seems to have the depth of motivation of a Disney villain also means that he does not work as a representation of the fundamental causes of colonial inequality, which tend to be economic, not personal. The various mixed messages about the contributors to the ongoing Afghan conflict suggest that Hosseini does not have anything insightful to say about it.

Perhaps the worst part about this book is how much it caters to the ignorance of White America. It will allow naive readers to feel better about themselves for feeling sympathy with the larger mid-east conflict, but is also lets them retain a sense of superiority over the Muslims for their 'backwards, classicist, warlike' ways. In short, it supports the condescending, parental view that many Americans already have about the rest of the world. And it does all this without revealing any understanding of the vast and vital economic concerns which make the greater mid-east so vitally important to the future of the world.

It is unfortunate that nowhere amongst this book's artfully dramatized violence and alternative praising and demonizing of the West is there the underlying sense of why this conflict is happening, of what put it all into place, and of why it will continue to drag us all down. The point where it could turn sympathy into indignation or realization is simply absent.

There is a bad joke on the internet showing a map of the world with the mid-east replaced by a sea-filled crater with the comment 'problem solved'. What this map fails to represent is that there is a reason the West keeps meddling in the affairs of the mid-east, and that every time we do, it creates another conflict--because almost every group who we decry as terrorists now were originally trained and armed by the US and Western powers to serve our economic interests.

As long as we see extremists as faceless sociopaths, we can do nothing against them. We must recognize that normal people fall down these paths, and that everyone sees himself as being 'in the right'. Who is more right: the Westerner whose careless bomb kills a child, or the Muslim's that does?

The point shouldn't be to separate the 'good Muslims' from the 'bad Muslims', because people aren't fundamentally good or bad. They are fundamentally people. Almost without exception, they are looking out for their future, their children, and their communities. Calling someone 'evil' merely means you have ceased to try understanding their point of view, and decided instead to merely hate because it's easier to remain ignorant than to try to understand.

This book isn't particularly insightful or well-written, but that is in no way unusual in bestsellers. The problem is that Americans are going to use this book to justify their ignorance about the problems in the east. This book will make people feel better about themselves, instead of helping them to think better about the world.

For an actually insightful, touching view of the Afghan conflict, I would suggest avoiding this bit of naive melodrama and looking up Emmanuel Guibert's 'The Photographer'.
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Reading Progress

May 21, 2008 – Shelved
Started Reading
July 3, 2008 – Shelved as: contemporary-fiction
July 3, 2008 – Finished Reading
July 9, 2008 – Shelved as: novel
June 9, 2009 – Shelved as: reviewed

Comments Showing 151-193 of 193 (193 new)

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Valerie Yet, you read this book the same as us. What makes you special?


message 152: by Chiara (new) - rated it 5 stars

Chiara Kiri How ironic to write a raging review about inequality and underlying racism and still not realizing how uneducated and racist YOU really are. Pretending to know more spitting in front of the authors feet who grew up in Afghanistan himself, whose family fleet to the US. Also, do you not realize that this is a fiction, not a history book?


message 153: by Nancy (new) - added it

Nancy My thoughts on your review:
I feel like you took a book and used it as an introduction to justify your political rant. It's a story. Like it hate it, but dont use it for your own personal agenda...and lighten up...it just be exhausting being that judgmental all the time...


message 154: by Muthu (new)

Muthu Krishnan Good


message 155: by John (new) - rated it 5 stars

John Norton I bet you have a neck beard and rate IPA’s at the local pub. Get bent.


message 156: by Rani (new) - rated it 2 stars

Rani H. Thank you for the book recommendation , "The Photographer." It was such an honest look into a world that I know so little about.

War isn't simple. People aren't simple. Readers aren't simple. That's my take-away from The Kite Runner.


message 157: by Holly (new) - rated it 5 stars

Holly Perception is intriguing. This man read the book and saw politics. I read the book and found emotion. To me, the heart of this story was about the deep bonds of childhood friendship. It could have been set anywhere two friends are pulled apart and face struggles and danger. The politics are simply a backdrop.


Sasquatch Whilst I thouroughly enjoyed your view on this and it certainly makes me see the book in a different light, it is not meant to be anything other than pure fiction. I don't argue that superman is nonsense because people can't fly. I realiase I'm being a little facetious, but I believe my point is valid. It is make believe, nothing more.


message 159: by Tewi (new) - added it

Tewi “White people bad!”

I wish we were half as bad as you jealous losers pretend. I wish so much.


message 160: by Salwa (new)

Salwa Brilliant review!


message 161: by Virtue (new) - rated it 1 star

Virtue Brilliant review! This book is liked mostly by those who received deficient education in the failed Western education system. This book seems to be crafted to fit Western hypocrisy and further promote it. No wonder that it makes many commenters angry, because nothing angers Westerners more than exposure of their hypocrisy and exposure of their narrow-minded "good guy-bad guy" worldview.


message 162: by lara (new) - rated it 5 stars

lara “Calling someone evil means u have ceased to try understanding their pov” were literally talking bout ra*sts & te****sts here. those people are disgusting


message 163: by Soha (new) - rated it 3 stars

Soha Have you lived in middle east and had to live with the fu**ing culture for years??
I don't particularly like this book but the culture is actually very well depicted. There are Middle-Easterns who say otherwise of course. One of my close friends even! But the reason is simple. She lives in a mediocre family and doesn't understand the pain some of us have to go through. And only sees herself and her family. Yet some of us sleep worried that our father my try to murder us at night because he saw us without hijab in the street once.
Do you know HOW TERRIFYING that is????


message 164: by Amir (new) - rated it 5 stars

Amir Arsalan Ganji I have to express the sentiment everybody else is; the kite runner isn’t a book about the political and historical context and themes of Afghanistan. Yes, those play a part in the story, but it’s meant to be a fictional, educational and simple story about afghanistan and it’s culture. I have no idea how you see this to be whitewashing afghan culture. Either you have some incredible insight into afghanistan or you’re simply ignorant. Yes this is a story marketed mostly towards westerners. Yes it has its problems, Assef being an irredeemable sociopath is not only taking the humanity out of the people who succumb to neo-fascist ideologies, it refuses to understand that they can change. The book face plants in creating a human villain. Then again, having a thoroughly convinced racist ideologue as the main villain of the story is fine, it’s just that since that character can never change it creates the set-in-stone dichotomy of ,,good Muslims’’ and ,,bad Muslims’’ which is no doubt the worst thing to come out of this book. This book isn’t comprehensive about Afghanistan by any means but the danger lies in white people reading it and getting the feeling they know about the conflicts when in reality they solved a crossword and now want to beat Gary Kasparov


Hermione Look, I really love this book but your review describes everything wrong with the Western values today. I'm from Europe and unfortunately I believe that if the book wasn't written to fit a certain audience it wouldn't have become a best seller and I wouldn't have even heard about it. Even though this book was a wonderful experience for me I appreciate this review.


Victoria The author is from Afghanistan. The book is not marketed as historical fiction. While it may be "westernized" how many other books do you see mass produced with the same topics *introduced* by this book? I am sure that the author wrote this book to provide an emotional connection to some of the struggles happening in Afghanistan-but I doubt it was written as the final book to be read on the topic. You're acting like you expect all 350 paged books to capture the entire history of a country and still remain engaging to a wider audience?


message 167: by Linda (new) - rated it 5 stars

Linda Lindsey You say that this is the type of book that white America reads to feel worldly. I’m really thankful that there are people like you to help white Americans know why they’re reading a book. It’s amazing that you know the minds and motives of an entire race of people…quite impressive!


message 168: by Sara (new) - rated it 5 stars

Sara Mohamed You really thought you did something with your review. Go touch some grass.


message 169: by Taryn (new) - added it

Taryn Peacock This review is a big, fat, no.


mina i feel like you missed the entire point of this book


message 171: by Yvonne (new)

Yvonne Marie To think that they had my 10th graders read this for school. Reading this shows exactly why I'm hesitant of books being given to read for a grade. I, honestly, wanted to read just to see exactly what is it that they have people reading at school. I think after reading this makes me more comfortable in going into it and expecting anything different. Thank you.


message 172: by Virtue (new) - rated it 1 star

Virtue This book was written by a shyster who targeted a gullible American audience. He succeeded in fooling them, but that is not an achievement to be proud of. They also believed a borderline-moron Goerge W talking garbage about "Saddam's weapons of mass murder in Iraq" and Saddam's non-existing "nuh-killer weapons" so they are easy to buy any propaganda and even shed a tear or two over it, while ignoring millions of deaths and destruction caused by their ignorance.


message 173: by nawa (new) - rated it 3 stars

nawa I disagree a lot with the first part of your review. In my opinion the representation about Afghanistan and its culture is very well done. For Western (European/American) people the book gives a good and accurate insight on how life and especially the childhood in Afghanistan was before the war really started. I don't think that these aspects were influenced a lot by Western standards and yes, this is the kind of book a white American would read to feel worldly but there's nothing bad about that. That book will give them a good insight about Afghanistan, even if the plot might not be very well written, I would recommend this to everybody who wants a unbiased and accurate image of Afghanistan.


Rossana Read your review today after coming back to sort through my shelves. I can’t disagree with many thought of yours. But remember that before the latest Afghanistan war, most people of the western world had never studied or read much about Middle East history and culture. I affirm that because I’m an avid reader since the age of 9, and before authors as Hosseini, no novels or romances that could interest the younger people to read more about your culture were ever published in portuguese. Even if historically superficial or simplistic, its thanks to his books that many other countries had access to these translated publications in their own languages. So although I understand your point of view, I disagree with your rating. Mainly because in view of many bad books published in the last 10 years, Hosseini is a great writer, with well created characters, great language and structure, and easy to read and empathize. This book is after all a romance (a novel) and not a theoretical treatise on Afghan history and culture. Giving this book less than 3 stars is a disrespect to good literature, since it’s objective it’s not teaching about the details of the culture. But it was a great introduction to learn a little bit more of the history and culture of the country. And at least for me, Hosseini is the reason I got curious about Afghan, opened an encyclopedia to read more about it and decided to learn more about it’s History and Culture. I may never be able to visit it in person, but at least, now I know all the relevant information to do it, if I ever have the chance.


message 175: by Tika H (new) - added it

Tika H Did u even read this book? Cuz it’s not a history textbook


message 176: by f$ (new)

f$ Your giving uneducated snow roach 😂


message 177: by Daniel (new)

Daniel Triumph The irony of this review next to the ones below it is almost painful.


juweria ! BOOOO🍅🍅🍅


message 179: by Tushar (new) - rated it 4 stars

Tushar Kant in my review i have also written about dislike for coincidence and this book is full of them. Author seems to have confused about his target whether it ought to be a classic or drama to hook lazy minds for pure entertainment. your review is ruthless but so is truth most of the times. Regards


paulina this is not a history book you missed the point of the book 😭


Basmala Musa It's funny how many people can't see all the flaws and superficialities in the novel while it is all clear and obvious.
I have too many problems with it and you've stated them all, thank you!


Kristine I actually wonder why the author uses a term "Russian tanks" and calls the invadors "Russians", when in reality those were "Soviet tanks" and Soviet people (Belarusians, Russians, Latvians, Ukrainians, Georgians....). I haven't finished this book yet, but I feel a smell of political bias here a bit between the lines.....


message 183: by Sireen (new) - rated it 2 stars

Sireen Exactly what I wanted to say about this book as a Muslim and Middle Eastern myself.... Sooo many stereotypes.. The writer was clearly very defensive of only one point of view and never tried to tackle the other one.. In addition to the generalization of many groups and the wrong historical infromation.. It felt like he was trying to manipulate me into sympathizing with the characters when many of them were very selfish themselves but still wanted to portray them as heroes while the others were fully villians.. If I was someone from the west maybe, someone who has absolutely no background on the groups talked about in the book I would've definitely sympathized with them all...


message 184: by Erick (new) - rated it 5 stars

Erick Martinez El otro día estaba viendo en IMDB, las reseñas de El Elegido de Netflix y la gente criticando que un gringo fuera El Elegido, y me puse a pensar como criticaron a la protagonista de La Sirenita... Eso me hace pensar que con la gente nunca se quedara bien.


message 185: by sundus (new) - rated it 5 stars

sundus 🍅🍅🍅


─ adeline ・。゚✿ Genuine question: being from the perspective of children, how were they supposed to know all those things back then? (Were they children/teens when those historical facts happened? Because at least until my 15's I had absolute no clue about politics in depth, just enough to pass basic history classes)


message 187: by Rafi (new) - added it

Rafi Jim, your description of The Haj concerns me of its clear nationalistic propagandist de-humanizing racist nature. I avoid books of nationalist conveyances, but it's like the creators of the television show 24 read books like that and implemented its quality of ignorance, racism and nationalism in their show, especially in every even numbered season. You should Google: Nakba.


message 188: by Maia (new) - rated it 5 stars

Maia Lee @adeline sooo many Palestinian kids reporting on their experience with the current conflict at a young age. As do many kids remember what was happening with 9/11 in US. So I think that may be a little bias to say.


message 189: by Kat (new) - rated it 3 stars

Kat "The point shouldn't be to separate the 'good Muslims' from the 'bad Muslims', because people aren't fundamentally good or bad. They are fundamentally people." You know if you're gonna steal someone else's quote, you should at least give them credit.(Neil Gaiman & Terry Pratchett, Good Omens, 1990). I am beginning to wonder how many of your other "profound statements" are also stolen.


Richard I Porter Which years did you spend there?


message 191: by Jenne (new) - rated it 4 stars

Jenne How exactly are people supposed to learn…without reading? Are you arguing that everyone must experience directly…only? It seems like reading this book provided you with an opportunity to express yourself. And other readers, should they be allowed a similar experience? Should people not read something if they are not already well-versed in the historical background and context? Should writers refrain from writing if their point of view does not fit with this or that perspective? You have a right to your opinion and point of view. Do others?


Bacontrarian(Michael) @kat you say this like it's the most original observation in the world and only neil gaiman and terry pratchett could have written it


Isabelle Keely are you a white man or women?


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