Redemption.
Poignant.
The kite runner is a person, not a part of a kite. A kite race would be held in which there were teams of two, usually young boys. One would cut down the other kites. When a kite was cut, their partner, the kite runner would run to be the first to retrieve the kite.
A kite runner is someone who flies kites for a race, and in order to win that race a kite runner must cut the strings off of all of the kites; leaving the kite runner's kite the last one flying.
In "The Kite Runner," the kite symbolizes freedom, redemption, and a connection to the past. The act of kite-flying represents a sense of joy and release for the characters, while also serving as a link to memories and relationships that shape their identities.
Khaled Hosseini is the author of The Kite Runner
No, road runner is not one word.
A term like this one is not much heard. Kite-flyer (kite-flier) is not at all a bad term for it can mean what it means. Wait until the term 'kite-runner' is being used globally. You may have the meaning 'Pattam parathunnavan' or Pattam parathukaran' in Malayalam.
One.
Yes, "The Kite Runner" by Khaled Hosseini does make a reference to the Rubaiyat of Omar Khayyam. In the novel, Baba quotes lines from the Rubaiyat in Farsi when discussing the importance of being true to oneself and one's values.
The soldier wants to have sex with one of the women inside the truck.
The bird is- KITE The bird is- KITE
The quote "There is only one sin. And that is theft... when you tell a lie you steal someone's right to the truth" can be found in Chapter 10 of "The Kite Runner" by Khaled Hosseini, on page 226 of the paperback edition.