Edina Reads
is a One-Book, community-wide reading program
that encourages
active reading,
lifelong learning,
and thoughtful conversation.
The Author
Khaled Hosseiniis the author of The Kite
Runner. He was born in Kabul, Afghanistan, in 1965. His
father was a diplomat with the Afghan Foreign Ministry and
his mother taught Farsi and History at a large high school
in Kabul. In 1970, the Foreign Ministry sent his family to
Tehran, where his father worked for the Afghan embassy. They
lived in Tehran until 1973, at which point they returned to
Kabul. In July of 1973, on the night
Hosseini’s youngest brother was born, the Afghan king, Zahir
Shah, was overthrown in a bloodless coup by the king’s
cousin, Daoud Khan. At the time, Hosseini was in fourth
grade and was already drawn to poetry and prose; he read a
great deal of Persian poetry as well as Farsi translations
of novels ranging from Alice in Wonderland to Mickey
Spillane’s Mike Hammer series.
In 1976, the Afghan Foreign Ministry once again relocated
the Hosseini family, this time to Paris. They were ready to
return to Kabul in 1980, but by then Afghanistan had already
witnessed a bloody communist coup and the invasion of the
Soviet army. The Hosseinis sought and were granted political
asylum in the United States. In September of 1980,
Hosseini’s family moved to San Jose, California. They lived
on welfare and food stamps for a short while, as they had
lost all of their property in Afghanistan. His father took
multiple jobs and managed to get his family off welfare.
Hosseini graduated from high school in 1984 and enrolled at
Santa Clara University where he earned a bachelor’s degree
in Biology in 1988. The following year, he entered the
University of California-San Diego’s School of Medicine,
where he earned a Medical Degree in 1993. He completed his
residency at Cedars-Sinai Hospital in Los Angeles.
Hosseini has been in practice (Internal Medicine) since
1996, but his first love has always been writing. Hosseini
has vivid, and fond, memories of peaceful pre-Soviet era
Afghanistan, as well as of his personal experiences with
Afghan Hazaras. One Hazara in particular was a
thirty-year-old man named Hossein Khan, who worked for the
Hosseinis when they were living in Iran. When Hosseini was
in the third grade, he taught Khan to read and write. Though
his relationship with Hossein Khan was brief and rather
formal, Hosseini always remembered the fondness that
developed between them.
Author's Website