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Conversations with Salman Rushdie (Literary Conversations) [Paperback]

Salman Rushdie (Author), Michael Reder (Author), Michael R. Reder (Author)
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Book Description

Literary Conversations July 1, 2000

"If there's an attempt to silence a writer, the best thing a writer can do is not be silenced. If somebody is trying to stifle your voice, you should try and make sure it speaks louder than before."

Acclaim, success, and controversy follow every one of Salman Rushdie's writings. His novels and stories have won him awards and made him both famous in the literary world and a catalyst for protests worldwide. For nearly a decade after publication of The Satanic Verses, he faced a bounty on his life.

Although Rushdie has participated in a great number of interviews, many of his most revealing conversations were published in journals and newspapers throughout the globe -- not only in England and the United States, but also in India, Canada, and across Europe. Conversations with Salman Rushdie, the first collection of interviews with Rushdie, brings together the best and some of the rarest of the interviews the author has granted.

Though many know Rushdie for his novels, what most do not realize is the breadth of Rushdie's writing and thinking. There are many other Salman Rushdies -- the travel writer, the crafter of short stories, the filmmaker, the "children's" story writer, the essayist and critic, and the unflinching commentator on contemporary culture, particularly on race and inequality.

"The speaking of suppressed truths is one of the great possibilities of the novel," he tells the Third World Book Review, "and it is perhaps the main reason why the novel becomes the most dangerous of art forms in all countries where people, governments, are trying to distort the truth."

Rushdie talks extensively about the creative process, about his views on art and politics, and about his life before and after the fatwa. Articulate, witty, and learned, he shows the side of himself that sparks such controversy. While not necessarily seeking to provoke, Rushdie shows how controversy is often inseparable from the politically charged situations and issues that compel him to write.

Rushdie takes risks in his writing, pushing both the novelistic form and language to its limits. "Dispense with safety nets," he says in Imaginary Homelands. These interviews reveal a man with a powerful mind, a wry sense of humor, and an unshakable commitment to justice.

Michael R. Reder is director of the Roth Writing Center and an instructor in the department of English at Connecticut College.


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Editorial Reviews

From Booklist

Indian novelist Rushdie gained international attention beyond the literary world when, in 1989, the Ayatollah Khomeini issued a fatwa, an edict calling for Rushdie's death because of perceived anti-Muslim sentiment expressed in his explosive novel The Satanic Verses. Regardless of the notoriety that the sentence placed on him engendered, Rushdie's status as a major writer and his influence on other contemporary writers of fiction in English have long been established. The latest volume in this publisher's series of informative collections of interviews with significant authors gathers published conversations with Rushdie from the early 1980s to the present. Rushdie is a forthright interviewee; what he doesn't want to discuss, he won't (and that happens only infrequently), but in the majority of instances he answers questions with thought and detail. Topics covered include deeply literary ones, such as the importance of digressions in the structure of a novel, as well as more mundane ones: for example, love as the central issue in most people's lives. Brad Hooper
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved --This text refers to the Hardcover edition.

Product Details

  • Paperback: 256 pages
  • Publisher: University Press of Mississippi (July 1, 2000)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1578061857
  • ISBN-13: 978-1578061853
  • Product Dimensions: 8.7 x 5.9 x 0.7 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 13.6 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #864,715 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

Sir Salman Rushdie is the author of many novels including Grimus, Midnight's Children, Shame, The Satanic Verses, The Moor's Last Sigh, The Ground Beneath Her Feet, Fury, Shalimar the Clown and The Enchantress of Florence. He has also published works of non-fiction including, The Jaguar Smile, Imaginary Homelands, The Wizard of Oz and, as co-editor, The Vintage Book of Short Stories.

He has received many awards for his writing including the European Union's Aristeion Prize for Literature. He is a fellow of the Royal Society of Literature and Commandeur des Arts et des Lettres. In 1993 Midnight's Children was judged to be the 'Booker of Bookers', the best novel to have won the Booker Prize in its first 25 years. In June 2007 he received a knighthood in the Queen's Birthday Honours.

 

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10 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars A real treat for Rushdie fans, November 14, 2004
This review is from: Conversations with Salman Rushdie (Literary Conversations) (Paperback)
The collection of interviews compiled here is a remarkable chronicling of the pursuits and tribulations that Rushdie has had to encounter in his work, often controversial yet boldly empowering to voices unheard from in India, and I think it serves a very useful role in trying to unravel the whole Rushdie phenomenon. Rushdie's response to the fatwa, his original intentions in portraying the more controversial elements of Midnight's Children, his take on contemporaries, Gunther Grass, Garcia Marquez, are all stimulating works. This is the art of the interview on showcase here, folks, and even if you've read "Step Across This Line" or Rushdie's other personal essays, this offers a third-person perspective that will enchant readers nonetheless.

Interestingly enough, I recently heard Rushdie talk at a lecture in New York recently, and hearing him speak on a letter he received anonymously, I recollect the words, which admirably enough, say to Rushdie something to the effect of: "Imagine you are surrounded by terrorists pointing guns to your head in an enclosed room, and entering this room there is only a door. Imagine your lover is outside somewhere hopefully trying to save you. Now imagine the door being broken down, the gunmen turn around, and the hero who enters first is struck down with bullets. Even though the person first to break down the door is now riddled with bullets, the door is still broken down. Others may now enter and save me. This is what you have done for me."

I find this enormously helpful in coming to grips with his story and the large degree of *inspiration* Rushdie has provided people in the aftermath of his human tragedy. The freedoms for which he has "taken the hit" and by which others can now be liberated to speak their concerns cannot be underscored more gracefully.

But my own anecdotes aside, this collection is a very good one, indeed, and if you're looking for greater insight into Rushdie the Man, not Rushdie the Myth, you can look no further. The interviews are sparkling at times and always rich and provocative.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars "The author" is very much alive..., December 19, 2010
This review is from: Conversations with Salman Rushdie (Literary Conversations) (Paperback)
Books still matter. No single author proclaims that louder, both figuratively and literally, than Salman Rushdie, arguably today's most famous literary author. He represents a large chunk of today's migrant humanity, being himself an amalgam of Indian-Pakistani-British-American in upbringing, culture and locale. In a sense he belongs to all of these cultures while belonging to none of them simultaneously. A new sense of one's "homeland" has emerged - or perhaps the old sense has dissipated into wispy illusion. Likewise, our concepts of "citizenship" and "roots" have undergone radical changes in the past fifty years. What do these now quaint sounding words communicate in an era of rampant globalism? And what does it mean for one's being to bridge multiple cultures? Rushdie has explored such "alienated identities" in his novels, essays and interviews. His most famous (or infamous) novel "The Satanic Verses" deals with these themes of cross-cultural migration in magical realistic detail. Of course, a few not-so-funny things happened on the way to the forum. Of course most of the hoopla and scandal surrounding the fatwa has dribbled away, at least in the West, so the book now receives the attention it deserves as a novel rather than as a political potboiler. Regardless, the nefarious fatwa will always follow Rushdie shadow-like and will always symbolize his career. This fact emerges most definitely in his interviews, many of which were collected in 2000 as "Conversations with Salman Rushdie." This collection spans the beginning of Rushdie's (successful) career up to the release of 1999's "The Ground Beneath Her Feet." The subsequent effect of the fatwa firestorm on his career and psyche get put on display outright and in his own words. As the interviews progress in time, he gradually emerges as the symbol of freedom of speech and intolerance for intolerance that he still represents. At the bottom of it all sits the seemingly innocuous, but apparently still very volatile, book.

The interviews begin in 1982, not long after the awarding of the Booker Prize to his second novel, "Midnight's Children." This event single-handedly made his name in global literary circles. These early discussions, ranging though "Shame," focus on the writing process, magic realism, his inspirations and influences and the disparate notions of reality that sprouted in the twentieth century. Rushdie's work also possesses a certain Foucaultian subtext; it provides an archaeology of sorts concerning alternate notions of history and reality, namely, the migrant's perspective. Along those lines, some interviews suggest that Rushdie's main inspiration involved coming to terms with himself, or at least with his unique culture-straddling situation. This makes sense seeing that his early novels' locales correspond with countries he has occupied: India, Pakistan and England. Along the way he symbolized, consciously or unconsciously, an entire generation. Apart from a few scandals surrounding "Midnight's Children" (Indira Gandhi sued him over certain passages) and "Shame" (Pakistani leaders at the time didn't appreciate their literary depictions), the interviews project a certain "normality" up to the release of "The Satanic Verses." One interview takes place on the day after the book's release in 1988. It's amazing to read this in light of what happened: no global scandal, no death threats, just the release of a novel. Here the interlocutors discuss themes of duality (angels and devils) and description as a political act. Then, later in 1988, signs of trouble appear along with ominous comparisons to "The Last Temptation of Christ." A "Newsweek" article from February 1989 then christens the fatwa era. Interviews quickly become scarce, as Rushdie made few public appearances between 1989 and 1995. One from 1991 in particular sticks out and Rushdie went on to regret and excoriate its claims. In it he claims to have embraced Islam. Throughout the discussion his voice seems disoriented, confused and insecure. That same year "Imaginary Homelands," Rushdie's first collection of essays was released with a concluding piece entitled "Why I Have Embraced Islam." Later editions expurgated it. Subsequent interviews feature solemn detractions of his "conversion." By 1995 Rushdie's world has settled down and the interviews begin to increase dramatically in number. At one point he claims that "no one should feel sorry for me." But earlier he stated that "my life has been wrecked." Such seemingly contradictory claims only showcase the disruption he likely experienced during those grueling and uncertain years. 1995 also saw the release of "The Moor's Last Sigh," which upset some Hindu groups in India and delayed the book's release there, but no international ripples of scandal followed. Rushdie discusses the novel's themes with Charlie Rose and others while vetting the inevitable, and often repetitive, fatwa questions. The final interview gives a brief overview of "The Ground Beneath Her Feet" and concludes with Rushdie's desire to move to America, which he of course did soon after.

Interviews can illuminate an author's work like no other discussion. Though some theorists have claimed "the death of the author," the concept seems very much alive in collections such as this. At one point Rushdie even admits that he finds such structuralist theories "implausible." Perhaps the author concept contains some characteristics of Rasputin. In any case, many of the interviews here elucidate the themes and subtexts of some of Rushdie's most acclaimed works, most notably "Midnight's Children," "Shame" and "The Satanic Verses." Other books receive meager attention, such as "The Jaguar Smile," "Haroun and the Sea of Stories," "Imaginary Homelands" and "East, West." 1992's essay "The Wizard of Oz" doesn't even seem to exist in this context. Comparatively, the obscure "Grimus" pops up frequently, though Rushdie often dismisses it. Regardless, Rushdie speaks eloquently about his major works and the situations in which they were written. Fans will greedily eat up each interview. On a personal level, inquiries into Rushdie's non-writing life typically receive laconic answers. At one point, when asked about his son, Rushdie simply says "Do you mind if we don't talk about that," though the situation was more than understandable. Other intimate anecdotes do emerge, though, such as Rushdie's very tolerant Muslim Grandfather and some light details about his divorce from Marianne Wiggins. Overall, these interviews focus on his work, apart from the few conversations overwhelmed by the fatwa. They also help illuminate a justifiably acclaimed author's tribulations throughout what must have been an indescribable experience. On that topic, Rushdie recently announced a memoir about his time in hiding, but no potential release date has followed. And of course we now know, some ten years later, that things turned out OK. This volume then ends on a fairly happy note. Plus, it seems to prove that the book, along with "the author," still exerts undeniable force. Let's hope that continues well into the future whether we're reading on paper or on LCD screens.
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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
CA interviewed Salman Rushdie by phone on 1 June 1982, at his home in London. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
last sigh
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Salman Rushdie, Charlie Rose, The Satanic Verses, Omar Khayyam, Arabian Nights, Shiv Sena, Booker Prize, Ayatollah Khomeini, Labour Party, Rajiv Gandhi, Action Committee, Channel Four, Indira Gandhi, Jimmy Carter, Martin Amis, National Front, Peter Carey, Princess Diana, Sufiya Zinobia, The Ground Beneath Her Feet, Book Three, Evie Burns, New Delhi, Norman Mailer, Publishers Weekly
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