“The Kite Runner”, by Khaled Hosseini

Pg. 129

I glanced at him across the table, his nails chipped and black with engine oil, his knuckles scraped, the smells of the gas station–dust, sweat, and gasoline–on his clothes. Baba was like the widower who remarries but can’t let go of his dead wife. He missed the sugarcane fields of Jalalabad and the gardens of Paghman. He missed people milling in and out of his house, missed walking down the bustling aisles of Shor Bazaar and greeting people who knew him and his father, knew his grandfather, people who shared ancestors with him, whose pasts intertwined with his.

For me, America was a place to bury my memories.

For Baba, a place to mourn his.

Published in: on August 6, 2008 at 3:55 pm Leave a Comment
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