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What is the climax of The Kite Runner?

3 min read

Asked by: Michael Haynes

The climax of the novel and resolution of Amir’s inner turmoil comes when Assef brutally beats Amir for attempting to rescue Sohrab. Assef’s brass-knuckle punching is literally the beating that Amir was unwilling to take decades earlier to defend Hassan.

What is the climax or turning point of The Kite Runner?

The climax of “The Kite Runner” occurs in Chapter 22, when Amir finally locates Sohrab, the orphaned son of his childhood friend Hassan. Having learned about Hassan’s murder at the hands of the Taliban, Amir returned to Afghanistan to rescue the boy.

What is the rising action in The Kite Runner?

The rising action begins with the telephone call from Rahim Khan asking Amir to return to Afghanistan to rescue Sohrab. It then progresses through Amir’s flashback to his childhood and ends at the climax when he finally defeats the villain, Assef, with the help of Sohrab and his slingshot.

What is the main conflict of The Kite Runner?

MAN vs. MAN. Assef tells Amir that he will have to fight him to earn Sohrab’s freedom. He slips on his infamous brass knuckles and proceeds to beat Amir almost to death, until Sohrab brings the fight to a halt by aiming his slingshot at Assef and demanding him to stop.

What is the exposition of kite Runner?

Exposition. The novel begins in 2001, with the narrator, Amir, alluding to a phone call he received from his father’s friend Rahim Khan. He recalls something that happened in 1975, back when he lived in Afghanistan with his father, his father’s servant Ali, and Ali’s son Hassan.

What is the falling action of kite Runner?

Falling actionAmir rescues Sohrab from a life of physical and sexual abuse and struggles to learn how he and Sohrab can recover from the traumas each has endured.

What is the plot of The Kite Runner?

The Kite Runner is the story of Amir, a Sunni Muslim, who struggles to find his place in the world because of the aftereffects and fallout from a series of traumatic childhood events.

What is the conclusion of The Kite Runner?

The Conclusion occurs when Amir buys a kite for Sohrab and him to fly. They fly the kite and Sohrab Finally talks to Amir. Amir chases the kite for him and he finally feels happy.

Why does Amir betray Hassan?

Amir’s guilt gets the better of him, and he decides to betray Hassan once more in order to get his father to fire both Hassan and his father Ali, who is Baba’s servant.

What is the setting in The Kite Runner?

Much of the story described in The Kite Runner takes place in Afghanistan during two time periods, the 1970’s and 2001. The political climate of the country changed dramatically between those two times. Moreover, the novel describes ethnic and religious groups that are unfamiliar to many Americans.

Is Kite Runner a real story?

While Hosseini drew much of the book — its cultural richness, accounts of ethnic conflicts, even its evocation of annual children’s kite contests — from his own experience, Amir’s harrowing story is fiction. Beautifully written, startling and heart wrenching, “The Kite Runner” is also an episodic page turner.

Why did Hassan leave Ali?

When Rahim Khan’s father becomes angry because Rahim Khan wants to marry a Hazara woman, he resolves the problem not by moving his own family, but by sending away the Hazara woman and her family. Similarly, to resolve the tension between Hassan and Amir, Ali decides that they will leave.