The Kite Runner
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"For you, a thousand times over,"
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it's said in the prologue/chapter one so 3 times total i believe

i so agree with you, it is one of those quotes you cannot forget. holds so much significance. and also when he said "And that's the thing about people who mean everything they say. They think everyone else does too" LOVED IT.




I will add that Farid says it to Amir while he is in the hospital and Amir bursts into tears much to his puzzlement.
That would probably be midway in the novel after he gets some solace from getting a beating that he thinks he deserves from Assef . Amir is on his way to forgiving himself and feeling that he redeemed himself. He's not there yet so maybe that is why it affects him in such a way.
By the end, as you all say, Amir has come full circle.

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This line was said twice in the story, having about a twenty-six year gap between the times when they were uttered. The second time it would said is definitely more powerful than the first. The first being said without a burden of a terrible past filled with guilt, just a child doing a favor for a friend who he loved as a brother. The second time it was said had a much greater significance than the first. It was a statement meant to evoke a powerful emotion in its readers. It was a statement that showed a how the roles had switched. Hassan had always been a figure of servitude in Amir's life. Amir stated repeatedly how much of a loyal and undeniably honest person Hassan was. He even expressed how his own deceitfulness toward Hassan made him feel incredibly guilty. On page 54 Amir says, "To this day, I find it hard to gaze directly at people like Hassan, people who mean every word they say." So it's no question if Hassan meant what he said.
Now it is Amir saying this to Hassan's son. This line always signified the dedication to the one being spoken to by the one saying it. Amir has traveled half way across the world and nearly died in the process of retrieving Sorhab and ensuring his physical safety. This attests to the sincerity of the words spoken to Sohrab, Hassan's son. This statement, when spoken by Amir, is meant to show his servitude to Sohrab just it was meant to show Hassan's to Amir when spoken the first time.