Furious. The word means extremely angry or violent, but it can also mean anything involving violence, anger, or speed (such as "Fists of Fury" and the absurd "The Fast and the Furious"). Its roots reach back to Greek mythology, to the three snake-haired, bat-winged, and dog-faced goddesses Tisiphone, Alecto, and Megaera. These three horrible deities were the vengeful hands of the gods, punishing evil and wrongdoing, especially within families.
In FURY, Salman Rushdie uses every variation on these definitions, and the etymology of the word itself, to describe with modern life in America (as represented by New York City) and the fragility of family, relationships, and perhaps even sanity. Rushdie sarcasm cuts sharp and deep. His New York (no, his America) is an empty land, a moral vacuum filled with sensationalism, tawdriness, superficiality, materialism in the extreme, capitalism run rampant, self-serving and incompetent politicians the endless striving for publicity without sense of shame, culture without depth, and, like a drug addiction (note that both his heroes studiously avoid medicines and drugs of any kind), a continuous search for the constantly escalating "fix" that gives the citizenry their latest cheap thrill or sense of meaning. "The whole world was burning on a shorter fuse. There was a knife twisting in every gut, a scourge for every back." Rushdie also conceives three female Furies of his own (Solanka's wife Eleanor Masters, his cyberpunk neighbor and father-figure seeking Mila Milo, and the enchantingly beautiful Neela), and they indeed each exact their form of vengeance on the main character and sinner, Professor Malik Solanka.
Professor Solanka gives up his esteemed seat in philosophy at King's College, University of Cambridge, to develop a television program about the great philosophers using dolls as the main characters. The host/narrator/interviewer, a blonde female doll named Little Brain, travels through time to interview Spinoza, Galileo, and others. Against all odds, the show is highly successful, and Little Brain even more so. The doll takes on a marketing life of her own, becoming one of the world's best-selling toys even as she bears no residual connection whatsoever to philosophy. Wildly financially successful, Solanka is nevertheless unfulfilled. He finds himself prone to sudden, almost inexplicable rages, and they grow in strength until he finds himself one night standing over his wife's bed with a carving knife in his hands. To save his wife and young son from himself, he leaves them without explanation and heads for New York City, the land of continual regeneration and rebirth.
Solanka's appearance alone in New York sets the stage for all manner of adventures, most of which generate satire filled with cynicism about the people, politics, and culture of America. Everyone falls within his sniper's sights - Giuliani and Police Commissioner Safir are glove-puppets, Bush vs. Gore becomes Gush vs. Bore, Ellen DeGeneris delivers her "deeply so-so material" and exclaims to her adoring throng of screaming women, "Praise me, thank you, thank you, praise me some more, hey, look, Anne [Heche], we're an icon! wow!, it's so humbling..." Rushdie mines the current events and culture deeply - Elian Gonzalez, Amadou Diallo, Marc Antony and Marky Mark, El Duque, Halle, Tyra, Kate, Brad, Gwynnie, Meg , Julia, Tom, Jenny, Puffy, Mick, Christie Brinkley, Woody Allen, Donatella Versace, Charlton Heston ("Who let Charlton Heston out of his cage and then asked why children were getting shot?") - just to throw their inanity back in our face. And it works. "Everyone was an American now, or at least Americanized...Even anti-Americanism was Americanism in disguise, conceding, as it did, that America was the only game in town..." Literary allusions abound as well, from Kafka to Jackie Susann, from Joseph Conrad to Stanislaw Lem. Set within Rushdie's telescopic rifle sight, Maya Angelou becomes "the model for millions of young people...O, her dauntlessness in the face of poverty and cruelty! O, her joy when Fate chose her to be one of its Elect!"
Rushdie's story line wanders through the landscape of modern America. A string of gruesome serial murders (which Professor Solanka believes he may even have committed in his blinding, black-out rages) invades the upper crust of New York's young female socialites as 19- and 20-year olds Lauren Klein (a marriage of Ralph and Calvin?), Belinda Booken Candell, and Saskia "Sky" Schuyler die horribly, linked to a thrill-seeking sadomasochistic sex club. Rushdie draws particularly on the role of the Internet in creating further avenues of estrangement and escapism via a host of alternate realities. As ever, these virtual realities take on their own "real life," become marketed as products (Solanka strikes it rich a second time by inventing another set of "virtual dolls" whose story-line and characters actually inspire and invoke a revolution in a South Asian island named Lilliput-Blefuscu, drawn from the warring islands in Gulliver's Travels but modeled loosely on East Timor). Not only does America promote the confusion of real and make-believe, it exports those products around the world for good or bad.
At times chilling, at times hilarious, and at times fantastical and even slapstick (everywhere that Neela went, pratfalls among her male admirers were sure to go), FURY is an outlandish tale of post-millennial, globally networked, American-inspired life. Furious with its own ebullient energy, this story creates and explodes its own myths (Little Brain, Akasz Kronos, creator of the Puppet Kings of Baburia) and then explodes their superficiality in disturbing counterpoint to the depth and meaningfulness of the ancient Greek myths. A manic, hyperventilated, crazy quilt novel this may be, but as ever, Salman Rushdie's scalpel cuts sharply to expose the absurdities and tragedies of modern life. FURY is a joy to read and savor.