The protagonist's unsuccessful and lying threats are all logical, more or less familiar.
The roles of Hassan and the protagonist are too bloody. The father sleeps with the servant’s wife and gives birth to a child and then serves his legitimate son.
At the end of the book, there is a lot of ink on the "smile". In my opinion, the protagonist should enter the stage of debt repayment in the second half of his life. In this way, peace of mind is the greatest happiness in the world.
The United States has nothing else to do with the protagonist. It is just to break away from the original emotionally tortured environment. The so-called hometown is no match for guilt after all.
Stress, headache. . . . . .
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