Study Guide for The Kite Runner by Khaled Hosseini Book Summary
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ONLINE SUMMARY FOR THE KITE RUNNER: LITERARY CRITICISM
CHAPTER 7 Summary
Hassan tells Amir on the morning of the kite tournament that he
had had a dream. In the dream, they are at Ghargha Lake with thousands of other
people, but no one is swimming, because it is said that a monster has come to
the lake. Amir responds to this fear by jumping into the lake and is followed
by Hassan. The two of them go all the way to the middle and then swim back to
prove that there is no monster. The people clap wildly for them and then change
the name of the lake to Lake of Amir and Hassan, Sultans of Kabul. Neither boy
has a clue to what the dream means. Soon after breakfast, the family heads
for the tournament. People are sitting everywhere on their roofs, sipping hot
tea and listening to Afghan music. For a moment, Amir wants to withdraw from the
tournament and nearly does so, until Hassan whispers to him, “Remember, Amir Agha.
There’s no monster, just a beautiful day.” Amir is astounded once again at how
well Hassan knows him and it occurs to him that maybe Hassan made up the dream.
He finally decides that neither of them is smart enough to make up dream like
that, so he just says, “Let’s do it.” The two send the kite aloft with Amir controlling
the string and Hassan feeding it from the reel. A couple of times, Amir daydreams
for a moment and almost has his kite string cut; however, Amir makes it to the
last dozen and then the last half dozen, by three o’clock in the afternoon. Amir’s
greatest competitor is a blue kite that has cut many other kite strings. By three
thirty, there are only four left and he and the blue kite are two of them.
Finally, it comes down to the two of them. Now for Amir, who learns later that
people were screaming, “Boboresh!, Boboresh!” (Cut him! Cut him!) from the rooftops,
the only sound he hears is the pounding of his heart and all he smells is victory.
When a gust of wind suddenly lifts his kite, Amir loops it on top of the blue
one and lets it out so it cuts the string of the blue kite. He and Hassan hug
each other and scream, “We won! We won!’ while Baba stands on the roof and pumps
his fists and hollers and claps. It is the single proudest moment of his twelve
years when he sees father cheering like that. Hassan tells Amir they will
celebrate later and takes off after the blue kite as a trophy for his beloved
master. Amir calls out, “Hassan, come back with it!” and Hassan responds with
his enduring loyalty, “For you a thousand times over!” Amir then gathers in his
own kite and takes it to the gates of his house. After he hands it over to Ali,
he takes off to find Hassan with visions in his mind of how he will proudly present
the blue kite to his baba. Unfortunately, Amir cannot find the Hazara boy even
though he searches everywhere. People have seen him go by at times and they stop
Amir to help him and to congratulate him, which makes his search for Hassan take
even longer. Finally an old man, who runs a dried fruit stand, tells him that
he saw Hassan run by being chased by three boys dressed like Pashtuns. Amir knows
immediately who they are and frantically picks up his search. He finds
Hassan at the end of an alley, his way out blocked by the three boys - Assef,
Wali, and Kamal - and the blue kite on the ground behind him. However, Amir just
stands and watches as they close in on Hassan. He hears a tremor in Kamal’s voice
and he realizes that he is not afraid of Hassan, but is afraid of what Assef has
in mind for Hassan. Assef tells Hassan that he forgives him for the incident with
the slingshot the year before, but that with forgiveness, there is also a price
for the blue kite. Hassan refuses to give it up, because he has run it down fair
and square and that now it belongs to Amir. Assef asks Hassan if Amir would be
as loyal to him and reminds him not to ever fool himself into thinking he’s something
more than a dirty Hazara. Nonetheless, Hassan refuses to give up the kite. Assef
then takes off his coat while Amir crouches hidden from the rest and doesn’t speak
up. He says, “I opened my mouth and almost said something . . . The rest of my
life might have turned out differently if I had . . .” Hassan is only
able to throw one large rock before the boys are on him. As for Amir, his shock
and his fear causes his mind to remember how he and Hassan had both fed from the
breasts of Sakina and that there was a brotherhood between them; how they had
once visited a fortune teller together and that the blind man was so shocked by
what he felt in Hassan’s palm that he had not told him his fortune; how Amir had
had a dream where he was lost in snowstorm and a bleeding hand pulls him out of
the snow to see that the sky is blue and filled with kites. When he focuses
again on what’s happening in the alley, he sees Hassan’s pants have been thrown
into a corner and the three bullies are about to rape him. Amir also sees Hassan’s
face and on it is the look of the sacrificial lamb. This reminds of him of how
they ate lamb for the first of the three days of Eid Al-Adha, the day Afghans
celebrated Ibrahim’s willingness to sacrifice his only son to God. He remembers
how for one moment before the mullah sliced its throat, the lamb’s eyes reflect
a look of acceptance to his fate. This is the same look he sees in Hassan’s eyes.
Amir has one last
chance to stand up for Hassan before this terrible hurt is inflicted on him. Instead,
he runs. As he runs, he convinces himself that this is the price he has to pay
to win Baba. The question is: is it a fair price? The answer is: he’s only a Hazara,
isn’t he? About fifteen minutes later, at the deserted bazaar, Amir sees Assef
and his two friends run by and soon after comes Hassan with the blue kite in his
hands. Amir meets him at the birch tree and asks him where he’s been and that
he’s been looking for him. Fortunately, Amir’s face is in shadows and Hassan cannot
read his eyes as Amir cannot read his. Amir is glad of this, because he is afraid
of what he will see there. He could not bear to see his “guileless devotion.”
Hassan almost answers him, but then stops and that is the closest they ever come
to discussing what happened in the alley. When they arrive home, everything happens
just the way Amir had dreamed for so long: he carries the kite into the study
where Baba opens his arms to congratulate him. He buries his face into his father’s
chest and weeps, and for that moment he can forget what he has done.
Notes This is the most important chapter of the entire novel
in that it presents the problem that Amir will have to deal with the rest of his
life. It presents his greatest sin and what Rahim Khan had referred to on the
telephone as the event for which he could still do good. The dream foreshadows
Amir’s victory in the tournament, but there is still a monster or monsters to
be dealt with: Assef, Wali, and Kamal, and of course, Amir himself. For, Amir’s
inability to stand up for his friend is, at once, both as bad as and worse than
what the bullies have done. For he watched in cowardice even though Amir had stood
up for him the year before. The tournament is Amir’s greatest moment in his search
for acceptance from his father, but in the end, it is his worst hour for what
he allowed to happen to Hassan. This will now form the basis for the remainder
of the novel. Also, the foreshadowing set into place with Assef’s warning
that he was a patient person and would have his revenge eventually has finally
come true. Hassan will pay a terrible price for that revenge, but so will Amir.
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