Erya Women's Court cares about every woman's emotions.
The book was written before the Taliban were in power, and the country was called Afghanistan. Amir is the protagonist of this book, and his father is a great man. Having built their prettiest house there, opened a factory, and often done charity, they all respected him, but his father was always cold to him. Amir and his servant Hassan are two good playmates, Amir wants to win the local kite contest in order to get his father to look up, Hassan in order to help Amir retrieve his kite, in the alley by a group of people led by Assef, they want to grab the kite, but Hassan vowed to defend this kite that can bring victory to Amir, Hassan was raped, in fact, Amir saw it, but because of his cowardice, he did not help Hassan.

Amir wins the kite, but he feels a deep sense of guilt for Hassan, so he doesn't want to see them again, and on his 12th birthday, he framed Hassan for stealing his money, because Amir knew that his father hated thieves the most, and his father asked Hassan if you stole it? Hassan knew that if he said he hadn't stolen it, Amir's father would have believed him, and that would prove that Amir had lied, and Hassan said he stole it. But the father forgave Hassan.
Although his father forgave Hassan, Hassan's father left with hassan. Hassan's father could not allow his son who had stolen to stay here.
When war broke out, his father took Amir and moved to the United States. Although they left, Amir's guilt for Hassan lingered in his heart.
Amir's father died of illness in the United States, and Amir got married, and it wasn't until a phone call that he was pulled back to Kabul. One summer afternoon, his father's best friend Rahim Khan called Amir, who, after his father and son had left, found Hassan and his wife, and they returned to Kabul to manage amir's family's large house, and Hassan had a son, Sohrab. However, after the Taliban occupied Kabul in 1996, the house was forcibly occupied, and Hassan vowed to protect the house to the death, but Hassan and his wife were shot in the street. Sohrab went to an orphanage. Rahim Khan wanted Amir to go back to Kabul to save Sohrab, but Amir was once again cowardly, unwilling to give up his now stable life to return to Kabul to save Hassan's son, even though Hassan had spent his whole life paying for him.
Rahim Khan said you can't not go because Hassan is your father's illegitimate son.
Only then did he finally understand that his great father had been redeeming himself. He went to save Sohrab not only to redeem his own sins but also to redeem his father's sins.
Amir finally plucked up the courage to go to Kabul, but Sohrab was taken away by the Taliban. He painstakingly rescued Sohrab from the Taliban and brought him back to the United States. In the United States, Amir flew a kite with Sohrab, and he opened his hands and said to Sohrab as Hassan had said to him: For you, a thousand times.
Everyone has a kite in their heart, and his father spent his life doing good deeds to redeem his past sins against Hassan's mother. Amir was finally able to summon up the courage to redeem the guilt he had felt for Hassan
For more exciting content, come and follow Erya Women's Court