初中读后感-追风筝的人的英语读后感

李盛老师

初中读后感-追风筝的'人的英语读后感1

  The winter sun is warmer than the previous year, and it seems to be brewing a snowstorm...

  This kind of weather, in addition to work, a lot of time home, I do not know from when to start, I like to read novels. I read the book, "the kite runner" describes more human weakness, shame, guilt, regret, love, friendship, forgiveness and redemption.

  Hassan, the boy had a harelip, absolutely loyal to Amir, who Amir living, as he was injured, he was lying...... He has always been Amir as a friend, while Amir only takes him as an entertainment tool when he has no company. He sees Hassan making a fool of herself and laughing at Hassan's ignorance and kindness. Deceive him, take him for fun, only because Amir is a young master, Hassan is a servant, social status, money status is different, friends are only a noun. And that's what Hassan is. He's a pure damn, and with him, you always feel like a liar. He followed him, followed the friendship, the loyalty.

  Always pick up books, heart followed Amir and Hassan's fate ups and downs, he is very emotional, Hassan felt heartache, Amir feel poor. We are all the kite chasing people, that kite may be kinship, friendship, love, career, dream... And we have been on the road, and we have been courageous.

  Along the way, we lost a lot of people, friends, classmates, relatives... These people have appeared in their lives, more or less dotted with their own life.

  Many years later, Amir learned that Hassan and he were half brothers. He regretted that he remembered everything he did for him. He remembered that his father was driving away Ali and Hassan's efforts to block and distressed himself. Then he opens the self salvation journey, he regretted Hassan, care of their own thoughts, on his deathbed, but he has not smoked and himself with a nipple master is his brother, fate always love to play tricks on people, think of Hassan to protect themselves and injured when they want to now covered all over with cuts and bruises. Up to sin, and the man was no longer an arduous journey to find Hassan's son, Sohrab, the Hassan and the same temperament, appearance, speech nephew, finally from the heart to accept him, and he together, all the time to remind his own mistakes, he will take care of Sohrab. He left the band by person place, open human forgiveness......

  Maybe, just maybe, we now have Hassan such a friendship is not much more, have been replaced by money, status, rights, we suddenly found to have very good friends no longer contact with the wheel of time slowly rolling over, perhaps we don't change is the beginning of the heart, is to promote the development of society the.

  The kite runner, we are chasing hard bumps, perhaps we, only a part of the people to his beloved kite, but at least we have been very hard to

初中读后感-追风筝的人的英语读后感2

  This is a wonderful, beautiful epic of a novel. Set in Afghanistan and the United States between the 1970s to the present day, it is a heartbreaking tale of a young boy, Amir, and his best friend who are torn apart. This is a classic word-of-mouth novel and is sure to become as universally loved as The God of Small Things and The Glass Palace.

  Twelve year old Amir is desperate to win the approval of his father Baba, one of the richest and most respected merchants in Kabul. He has failed to do so through academia or brawn, but the one area where they connect is the annual kite fighting tournament. Amir is determined not just to win the competition but to run the last kite and bring it home triumphantly, to prove to his father that he has the makings of a man. His loyal friend Hassan is the best kite runner that Amir has ever seen, and he promises to help him - for Hassan always helps Amir out of trouble. But Hassan is a Shi'a Muslim and this is 1970s Afghanistan. Hassan is taunted and jeered at by Amir's school friends; he is merely a servant living in a shack at the back of Amir's house. So why does Amir feel such envy towards his friend? Then, what happens to Hassan on the afternoon of the tournament is to shatter all their lives, and define their futures.

  The Kite Runner of Khaled Hosseini's deeply moving fiction debut is an illiterate Afghan boy with an uncanny instinct for predicting exactly where a downed kite will land. Growing up in the city of Kabul in the early 1970s, Hassan was narrator Amir's closest friend even though the loyal 11-year-old with "a face like a Chinese doll" was the son of Amir's father's servant and a member of Afghanistan's despised Hazara minority. But in 1975, on the day of Kabul's annual kite-fighting tournament, something unspeakable happened between the two boys.

  Narrated by Amir, a 40-year-old novelist living in California, The Kite Runner tells the gripping story of a boyhood friendship destroyed by jealousy, fear, and the kind of ruthless evil that transcends mere politics. Running parallel to this personal narrative of loss and redemption is the story of modern Afghanistan and of Amir's equally guilt-ridden relationship with the war-torn city of his birth. The first Afghan novel to be written in English, The Kite Runner begins in the final days of King Zahir Shah's 40-year reign and traces the country's fall from a secluded oasis to a tank-strewn battlefield controlled by the Russians and then the trigger-happy Taliban. When Amir returns to Kabul to rescue Hassan's orphaned child, the personal and the political get tangled together in a plot that is as suspenseful as it is taut with feeling.

  The son of an Afghan diplomat whose family received political asylum in the United States in 1980, Hosseini combines the unflinching realism of a war correspondent with the satisfying emotional pull of master storytellers such as Rohinton Mistry. Like the kite that is its central image, the story line of this mesmerizing first novel occasionally dips and seems almost to dive to the ground. But Hosseini ultimately keeps everything airborne until his heartrending conclusion in an American picnic park.