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Satanic Verses

Average rating: 5/5

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Satanic Verses

by Salman Rushdie

Penguin Group Canada | September 1, 1988 | Hardcover

Just before dawn one winter''s morning, a hijacked jumbo jet blows apart high above the English Channel. Two figures fall to the sea, later washing up, alive, on a beach. It was an ambiguous miracle, for both seem to have acquired curious changes. Both have been chosen as opponents in the eternal wrestling match between Good and Evil.

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    Rating: 5/5

    A Metaphorical Wonder

    Lorina Stephens/Five Rivers

    • Author
    • Publisher

    14 months ago

    A great deal has been written since 1988 about Salman Rushdie's The Satanic Verses, which, aside from the obvious sensationalism regarding the Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini's fatwa, much of the commentary has been academic and speculative in nature. Pundits discuss Rushdie's penchant for migrant alienation, and use of magic realism. Others wax poetic regarding Rushdie's ability to weave political and spiritual themes together into a literary melange, while others state unequivocally The Satanic Verses is a metaphor of the prophet Muhammad's life.

    I do not claim to be an academic titan. Nor do I claim to be a spiritual guru. What I am is an avid reader who relishes literary provocation. Salman Rushdie has done just that. Provoked me. And allowed me epiphany.

    My journey with Rushdie's The Satanic Verses began in October. Only this morning (December 27) have I finished this epic work. And upon closing the black, cloth cover I smiled, experiencing a sense of literary completion and edification I have not known in many, many years. Was this an easy journey? No. Reading Rushdie's novel is not for the faint of heart. The language is dense, rich, much of it in stream-of-consciousness and an Indian patois, and in fact one memorable sentence, which left me breathless, I realized upon review was one entire page long.

    I was constantly amazed Rushdie took all grammatical landmarks and demolished them, using language, metaphor and simile to create tension, dream-state and yet still remain highly communicative. I am ashamed to say as an editor and publisher, had this manuscript come across my desk I would likely have returned it to the author after the first few pages. Yet I wonder if I would indeed have done just that, because I kept reading the novel after the first few pages, not because it was Rushdie (I have closed a book before on well-respected authors), but because there was something of mystery in what he presented.

    What is The Satanic Verses about? Only Rushdie himself can honestly and accurately answer that question. What I took away from this gigantic work is indeed what the pundits have made commentary, but as well I found a simple allegorical tale of mankind's inner journey to understand what it is to be human and whole. Rushdie himself writes in the voice of Chamcha that the Satanic verses (doggerel to torment his counterpart Farishta) were his own sin and regret, and that because of his inability to curtail his own inner demons he fed Farishta's madness and thereby responsible for Farishta's ultimate undoing.

    I will look forward to reading The Satanic Verses again in a year or two. It is a novel and a pilgrimage worth revisiting, and one I am honoured to have as part of the foundation our personal library.

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    Rating: 4/5

    An interesting if not terribly quick read

    Frank Furlano

    • Indigo Employee

    3 years ago

    To fully enjoy this book a reader needs to be aware of many other sources. From Dickens, to William Blake, to the Qu'ran, the more widely you have read the more of this book you will enjoy.
    That is not to say that it is not worth reading unless you have read the Qu'ran etc, but a good working knowledge of world religions and western literature will aid in the enjoyment of this book.
    Like I said in my title, not a terribly exciting read, as it was slowly paced, and not always moving in a linear fashion. In spite of all this it was a well written book with interesting characters, so well worth a read.

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    Rating: 1/5

    Waste of Time

    Shayne Baker

    4 years ago

    Salman should have used the alternate working title for this novel: 'Implied Satanism for Marketing Boost'. I don't get the sensationalism. Unless people burned his book as a way of saying thanks for wasting their time.

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    Stephen Kingwell

    Rating: 5/5

    Substance or Style?

    Stephen Kingwell

    11 years ago

    The breathtakingly real start to this novel continues through streams of consciousness and virtual reality before it spirals precipitously into a state of narcissistic mentality. Or is it the reverse? As Farishta and Saladin, along with the rest of the Indian diaspora, struggle with the bland, beautiful integration into colonialist culture, paradoxes abound. Good and evil, Islam and Bollywood, reality and insanity, past and present, all push the reader into a state of confused, contented, substance.

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Details

From Our Editors

Just before dawn one winter's morning, a hijacked jumbo jet blows apart high above the English Channel. Two figures fall to the sea, later washing up, alive, on a beach. It was an ambiguous miracle, for both seem to have acquired curious changes. Both have been chosen as opponents in the eternal wrestling match between Good and Evil

From the Publisher

Just before dawn one winter''s morning, a hijacked jumbo jet blows apart high above the English Channel. Two figures fall to the sea, later washing up, alive, on a beach. It was an ambiguous miracle, for both seem to have acquired curious changes. Both have been chosen as opponents in the eternal wrestling match between Good and Evil.

About the Author

Salman Rushdie was born in India, raised in Pakistan, and educated in England, where he now lives. His Rabelaisian skill for telling stories teeming with fantasy and history, and the virtuosity of his style, with its sly transliterations of Indo-English idioms, won him a delighted audience with the publication of Midnight's Children in 1980. However, it was the urgency with which he returned to the lands of his birth and childhood to write of a world where politics and the individual are inseparably connected that won him wide acclaim as a brilliant new novelist and intellectual. He manages to stand both inside and outside the world of developing nations and tell their stories. His fantastical retelling of the story of Islam set in a London peopled by immigrants from around the world, The Satanic Verses (1988), is his last full-length novel: its publication raised the anger of Muslims in Britain, South Asia, and the Middle East who asked that the novel be banned. In February 1989, Iran's Ayatollah Khomeini decreed a fatwa pronouncing the death sentence on him, and Rushdie has since lived in hiding. Subsequently, he offered several published explanations and apologies to Muslims (collected in Imaginary Homelands, 1991), and he also wrote a children's story, Haroun and the Sea of Stories (1990).

Hardcover

1 Pages, 6.68 x 9.28 x 1.67 IN

September 1, 1988

Penguin Group Canada


0670825379
9780670825370

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