Languages of truth Essays 2003-2020

Salman Rushdie

Book - 2021

"Salman Rushdie is celebrated as a storyteller of the highest order, illuminating deep truths about our society and culture through his gorgeous, often searing, prose. Now, in his latest collection of nonfiction, he brings together insightful and inspiring essays, criticism, and speeches that focus on his relationship with the written word, and solidify his place as one of the most original thinkers of our time. Gathering pieces written between 2003 and 2019, Languages of Truth chronicles Rushdie's own intellectual engagement with a period of momentous cultural shifts. Immersing the reader in a wide variety of subjects, he delves into the nature of storytelling as a deeply human need, and what emerges is, in myriad ways, a love le...tter to literature itself. Rushdie explores what the work of authors from Shakespeare and Cervantes to Samuel Beckett, Eudora Welty, and Toni Morrison mean to him, often by telling vivid, sometimes humorous stories of his own personal encounters with them, whether on the page or in person. He delves deeper than ever before into the nature of "truth," revels in the vibrant malleability of language, and the creative lines that can join art and life, and he looks anew at migration, multiculturalism and censorship. The ideas, true stories and arguments presented here are at once revelatory, funny and eye-opening, enlivened on every page by Rushdie's signature wit and dazzling voice, making this volume a genuine pleasure to read"--

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Subjects
Genres
Essays
Speeches
Published
New York : Random House [2021]
Language
English
Main Author
Salman Rushdie (author)
Edition
First U.S. edition
Physical Description
xi, 356 pages ; 25 cm
ISBN
9780593133170
  • Part 1.
  • Wonder Tales
  • Proteus
  • Heraclitus
  • Another Writer's Beginnings
  • Part 2.
  • Philip Roth
  • Kurt Vonnegut and Slaughterhouse-Five
  • Samuel Beckett's Novels
  • Cervantes and Shakespeare
  • Gabo and I
  • Harold Pinter (1930-2008)
  • Introduction to the Paris Review Interviews, Vol. IV
  • Autobiography and the Novel
  • Adaptation
  • Notes on Sloth: From Saligia to oblomov
  • Hans Christian Andersen
  • King of the World by David Remnick
  • Very Well Then I Contradict Myself
  • Part 3.
  • Truth
  • Courage
  • Texts for Pen
  • 1. The Pen and the Sword
  • 2. The Birth of Pen World Voices
  • 3. The Arthur Miller Lecture, 2012
  • 4. Pen World Voices Opening Night 2014
  • 5. Pen World Voices Opening Night 2017
  • Christopher Hitchens (1949-2011)
  • The Liberty Instinct
  • Osama Bin Laden
  • AI Weiwei and Others
  • The Half-Woman God
  • Nova Southeastern University Commencement Address, 2006
  • Emory University Commencement Address, 2015
  • Part 4.
  • The Composite Artist: The Emperor Akbar and the Making of the Hamzanama
  • Amrita sher-Gil: Letters
  • Bhupen Khakhar (1934-2003)
  • Being Francesco Clemente: Self-Portraits, Gagosian Gallery, London, 2005
  • Taryn Simon: An American Index of the Hidden and Unfamiliar, Whitney Museum, New York, 2007
  • Kara Walker at the Hammer Museum, Los Angeles, 2009
  • Sebastião Salgado
  • The Unbeliever's Christmas
  • Carrie Fisher
  • Pandemic: A Personal Engagement with the Coronavirus
  • The Proust Questionnaire: Vanity Fair
  • About These Texts
Review by Booklist Review

"One of the things I've learned as a writer is voraciousness," Rushdie confided in a commencement speech. Ravenous for life, stories, freedom, and justice, he is propelled on intellectual journeys between East and West, past and present, fact and fiction, words and image. Rushdie has not merely gathered together the essays in his third robust retrospective collection in three decades; he has "thoroughly revised" every piece, plunging into a grand array of subjects and fashioning ensnaring prose that is, by turns, erudite, caustic, and funny. Rushdie shares vivid family stories, celebrates "wonder tales," and argues for boldly imaginative fiction. But he also avers that writers must "undertake the task of rebuilding our readers' belief in reality, their faith in the truth." He states that migration "is the great subject of our time"; considers moral courage and paradox; freshly critiques the work of writers and artists ranging from Hans Christian Andersen and Kurt Vonnegut to Amrita Sher-Gil and Kara Walker, and closes with a chronicle of his bout with COVID-19. Engrossing and provocative testimony to our need for the "languages of truth."

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

"Before there were books, there were stories," writes Rushdie (Quichotte) in this mesmerizing collection. In the first of four sections, Rushdie explores how the "stories we fall in love with make us who we are": "Wonder Tales" sees him praising fiction for containing "profound truths." The second section focuses on writers: both Cervantes and Shakespeare, Rushdie writes, showed that fiction could be "many things at the same time." A piece about playwright Harold Pinter, a staunch friend of Rushdie's who stood up for him during the furor over his 1988 novel The Satanic Verses, highlights Pinter's notorious disdain for explaining his work. The third recounts Rushdie's work as president of PEN America: in "Courage," he challenges the notion that "writers, scholars, and artists who stand against orthodoxy or bigotry are to blame for upsetting people." The final section assembles Rushdie's writing on the visual arts, as in an essay on painter Amrita Sher-Gil's "ferocity of mind." (Rushdie's answers to the famous Proust questionnaire caps things off.) Rushdie's writing is erudite and full of sympathy, brimming with insight and wit: "Literature has never lost sight of what our quarrelsome world is trying to force us to forget. Literature rejoices in contradiction." Rushdie's fans will be delighted. Agent: Andrew Wylie, the Wylie Agency. (May)

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Library Journal Review

In this superb essay collection, Rushdie (Quichotte) examines a wide range of people and topics, including his friendship with Carrie Fisher, the influence of Heroclitus, the legacy of Muhammad Ali, the hijra community (a third gender officially recognized on the Indian subcontinent), Osama Bin Laden's secret compound, and the creation of over a thousand Hamzanama paintings in 16th-century India. Other essays discuss the works of notable writers, mostly men (Samuel Beckett, Miguel de Cervantes, Gabriel García Márquez, Harold Pinter). Some of Rushdie's texts originally appeared as lectures, introductions to books or exhibition catalogues, magazine or newspaper articles, or commencement addresses; others are being published for the first time in this book. Rushdie includes essays that describe his efforts to become a successful writer and his recent battle with COVID-19. In other insightful writings, he shares his opinions on the adaptation of books into film; the notion of moral courage; and a flawed, but common assumption that all novels are autobiographies in disguise. Essays have been thoroughly revised and the author often includes postscripts where necessary when revisiting subjects that he originally wrote or lectured about years before. These older writings in particular demonstrate Rushdie's foresight, predicting the rise of political demagoguery and attacks on truth. VERDICT Highly recommended for Rushdie fans, as well as readers interested in art, literature, or creative writing.--Erica Swenson Danowitz, Delaware Cty. Community Coll. Lib., Media, PA

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

Wide-ranging nonfiction pieces by the distinguished novelist, unified by his commitment to artistic freedom and his adamant opposition to censorship in any form. Rushdie sets the tone in the opening essay of this stimulating collection, culled from various lectures, journalism, and introductions to books and exhibition catalogs (all "thoroughly revised"). "Before there were books, there were stories," writes the author: Fiction was born from folktales, fables, and mythology, and the modern works Rushdie most admires share with those "wonder tales" an understanding that "injecting the fabulous into the real [makes] it more vivid and strangely, more truthful." In Parts 1 and 2, the author ranges across world mythology; the two great progenitors of modern literature, Cervantes and Shakespeare; and their 20th-century successors, including Vonnegut, Roth, Márquez, Beckett, and Pinter. All underscore Rushdie's point that conventional realism is insufficient to capture life's endless variety and strangeness. Part 3 engages with the political and social battles of our day, "when reality itself seems everywhere under attack." As the victim of attacks over allegedly blasphemous content in The Satanic Verses, Rushdie notes the essential similarity of Islamic and right-wing Christian fundamentalism, eloquently affirming the democratic values of pluralism, secularism, and tolerance. In several pieces about his work with PEN, where he established and served for a decade as chairman of the World Voices International Literary Festival, the author once again draws connections among artistic, political, and civil liberties and celebrates the international solidarity of artists. Part 4 spotlights the visual arts, from the 16th-century series of hundreds of paintings chronicling the "Adventures of Hamza," a pinnacle of Mughal art, to Hungarian Indian painter Amrita Sher-Gil and African American artist Kara Walker. Moving tributes to departed friends Christopher Hitchens and Carrie Fisher capture the warmth underlying their famed acerbity, wit, and rage--qualities Rushdie has been known to exhibit himself. This collection, however, showcases his generous spirit, dedicated to illuminating the work of fellow artists and defending their right to unfettered creativity. Formidably erudite, engagingly passionate, and endlessly informative: a literary treat. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Wonder Tales 1 Before there were books, there were stories. At first the stories weren't written down. Sometimes they were even sung. Children were born, and before they could speak, their parents sang them songs, a song about an egg that fell off a wall, perhaps, or about a boy and a girl who went up a hill and fell down it. As the children grew older, they asked for stories almost as often as they asked for food. Now there was a goose that laid golden eggs, or a boy who sold the family cow for a handful of magic beans, or a naughty rabbit trespassing on a dangerous farmer's land. The children fell in love with these stories and wanted to hear them over and over again. Then they grew older and found those stories in books. And other stories that they had never heard before, about a girl who fell down a rabbit hole, or a silly old bear and an easily scared piglet and a gloomy donkey, or a phantom tollbooth, or a place where wild things were. They heard and read stories and they fell in love with them, Mickey in the night kitchen with magic bakers who all looked like Oliver Hardy, and Peter Pan, who thought death would be an awfully big adventure, and Bilbo Baggins under a mountain winning a riddle contest against a strange creature who had lost his precious, and the act of falling in love with stories awakened something in the children that would nourish them all their lives: their imagination. The children fell in love with stories easily and lived in stories too; they made up play stories every day, they stormed castles and conquered nations and sailed the ocean blue, and at night their dreams were full of dragons. They were all storytellers now, makers of stories as well as receivers of stories. But they went on growing up and slowly the stories fell away from them, the stories were packed away in boxes in the attic, and it became harder for the former children to tell and receive stories, harder for them, sadly, to fall in love. For some of them, stories began to seem irrelevant, unnecessary: kids' stuff. These were sad people, and we must pity them and try not to think of them as stupid boring philistine losers. I believe that the books and stories we fall in love with make us who we are, or, not to claim too much, that the act of falling in love with a book or story changes us in some way, and the beloved tale becomes a part of our picture of the world, a part of the way in which we understand things and make judgments and choices in our daily lives. As adults, falling in love less easily, we may end up with only a handful of books that we can truly say we love. Maybe this is why we make so many bad judgments. Nor is this love unconditional or eternal. A book may cease to speak to us as we grow older, and our feeling for it will fade. Or we may suddenly, as our lives shape and hopefully increase our understanding, be able to appreciate a book we dismissed earlier; we may suddenly be able to hear its music, to be enraptured by its song. When, as a college student, I first read Günter Grass's great novel The Tin Drum , I was unable to finish it. It languished on a shelf for fully ten years before I gave it a second chance, whereupon it became one of my favorite novels of all time: one of the books I would say that I love. It is an interesting question to ask oneself: Which are the books that you truly love? Try it. The answer will tell you a lot about who you presently are. I grew up in Bombay, India, a city that is no longer, today, at all like the city it once was and has even changed its name to the much less euphonious Mumbai, in a time so unlike the present that it feels impossibly remote, even fantastic: a real-life version of the mythic golden age. Childhood, as A. E. Housman reminds us in "The Land of Lost Content," often also called "Blue Remembered Hills," is the country to which we all once belonged and will all eventually lose: Into my heart an air that kills From yon far country blows: What are those blue remembered hills, What spires, what farms are those? That is the land of lost content, I see it shining plain, The happy highways where I went And cannot come again. In that far-off Bombay, the stories and books that reached me from the West seemed like true tales of wonder. Hans Christian Andersen's "The Snow Queen," with its splinters of magic mirror that entered people's bloodstreams and turned their hearts to ice, was even more terrifying to a boy from the tropics, where the only ice was in the refrigerator. "The Emperor's New Clothes" felt especially enjoyable to a boy growing up in the immediate aftermath of the British Empire. And there was Huckleberry Finn, irresistible to a Bombay boy because of its hero's extraordinary freedom of action, though I was puzzled about why, if the runaway slave Jim was trying to escape the world of slavery and get to the non-slave-owning North, did he get onto a raft on the Mississippi, which flows south? Perhaps tales of elsewhere always feel like fairy tales, and certainly it is one of the great wonders of literature that it opens up many "elsewheres" to us, from the Little Mermaid's underwater world to Dorothy's Oz, and makes them ours. But for me, the real wonder tales were closer to home, and I have always thought it my great good fortune as a writer to have grown up steeped in them. Some of these stories were sacred in origin, but because I grew up in a nonreligious household, I was able to receive them simply as beautiful stories. This did not mean I did not believe them. When I heard about the samudra manthan, the tale of how the great god Indra churned the Milky Way, using the fabled Mount Mandara as his churning stick, to force the giant ocean of milk in the sky to give up its nectar, amrita, the nectar of immortality, I began to see the stars in a new way. In that impossibly ancient time, my childhood, a time before light pollution made most of the stars invisible to city dwellers, a boy in a garden in Bombay could still look up at the night sky and hear the music of the spheres and see with humble joy the thick stripe of the galaxy there. I imagined it dripping with magic nectar. Maybe if I opened my mouth, a drop might fall in and then I would be immortal too. This is the beauty of the wonder tale and its descendant, fiction: that one can simultaneously know that the story is a work of imagination, which is to say untrue, and believe it to contain profound truth. The boundary between the magical and the real, at such moments, ceases to exist. We were not Hindus, my family, but we believed the great stories of Hinduism to be available to us also. On the day of the annual Ganpati festival, when huge crowds carried effigies of the elephant-headed deity Ganesh to the water's edge at Chowpatty Beach to immerse the god in the sea, Ganesh felt as if he belonged to me too; he felt like a symbol of the collective joy and, yes, unity of the city rather than a member of the pantheon of a "rival" faith. When I learned that Ganesh's love of literature was so great that he sat at the feet of India's Homer, the sage Vyasa, and became the scribe who wrote down the great Mahabharata epic, he belonged to me even more deeply; and when I grew up and wrote a novel about a boy called Saleem with an unusually big nose, it seemed natural, even though Saleem came from a Muslim family, to associate the narrator of Midnight's Children with the most literary of gods, who just happened to have a big trunk of a nose as well. The blurring of boundaries between religious cultures in that old, truly secularist Bombay now feels like one more thing that divides the past from India's bitter, stifled, censorious, sectarian present. The Mahabharata and its sidekick, the Ramayana , two of the longest wonder tales of all, are still alive in India, alive in the minds of Indians and relevant to their daily lives, in the way the gods of the Greeks and Romans were once alive in Western imaginations. Once, and not so long ago, it was possible in the lands of the West to allude to the story of the shirt of Nessus, and people would have known that the dying centaur Nessus tricked Deianira, the wife of Heracles or Hercules, into giving her husband his shirt, knowing it was poisoned and would kill him. Once, everyone knew that after the death of Orpheus, greatest of poets and singers, his severed head continued to sing. These images and many others were available, as metaphors, to help people understand the world. Art does not die when the artist dies, said Orpheus's head. The song survives the singer. And the shirt of Nessus warned us that even a very special gift may be dangerous. Another such gift, of course, was the Trojan horse, which taught us all to fear the Greeks, even when they bring gifts. Some metaphors of the wonder tales of the West have managed to survive. But in India, as I grew up, the wonder tales all lived, and they still do. Nowadays it isn't even necessary to read the full Ramayana or Mahabharata ; some may be grateful for this news, because the Mahabharata is the longest poem in world literature, over two hundred thousand lines long, which is to say ten times as long as the Iliad and Odyssey put together, while the Ramayana runs to around fifty thousand lines, merely two and a half times as long as the combined works of Homer. Fortunately for younger readers, the immensely popular comic-book series Amar Chitra Katha, "immortal picture stories," offers adept renderings of tales from both. Excerpted from Languages of Truth: Essays 2003-2020 by Salman Rushdie All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.