Editorial Reviews
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Anyone who has spent time in the developing world will know that one of Bombay's
claims to fame is the enormous film industry that churns out hundreds of musical
fantasies each year. The other, of course, is native son Salman Rushdie--less
prolific, perhaps than Bollywood, but in his own way just as fantastical. Though
Rushdie's novels lack the requisite six musical numbers that punctuate every
Bombay talkie, they often share basic plot points with their cinematic
counterparts. Take, for example, his 1980 Booker Prize-winning Midnight's
Children: two children born at the stroke of midnight on August 15, 1947--the
moment at which India became an independent nation--are switched in the
hospital. The infant scion of a wealthy Muslim family is sent to be raised in a
Hindu tenement, while the legitimate heir to such squalor ends up establishing
squatters' rights to his unlucky hospital mate's luxurious bassinet. Switched
babies are standard fare for a Hindi film, and one can't help but feel that
Rushdie's world-view--and certainly his sense of the fantastical--has been
shaped by the films of his childhood. But whereas the movies, while
entertaining, are markedly mediocre, Midnight's Children is a masterpiece,
brilliant written, wildly unpredictable, hilarious and heartbreaking in equal
measure.
Rushdie's narrator, Saleem Sinai, is the Hindu child raised by wealthy Muslims.
Near the beginning of the novel, he informs us that he is falling
apart--literally:
I mean quite simply that I have begun to crack all over like an old jug--that
my poor body, singular, unlovely, buffeted by too much history, subjected to
drainage above and drainage below, mutilated by doors, brained by spittoons, has
started coming apart at the seams. In short, I am literally disintegrating,
slowly for the moment, although there are signs of an acceleration.
In light of this unfortunate physical degeneration, Saleem has decided to write
his life story, and, incidentally, that of India's, before he crumbles into
"(approximately) six hundred and thirty million particles of anonymous, and
necessarily oblivious, dust." It seems that within one hour of midnight on
India's independence day, 1,001 children were born. All of those children were
endowed with special powers: some can travel through time, for example; one can
change gender. Saleem's gift is telepathy, and it is via this power that he
discovers the truth of his birth: that he is, in fact, the product of the
illicit coupling of an Indian mother and an English father, and has usurped
another's place. His gift also reveals the identities of all the other children
and the fact that it is in his power to gather them for a "midnight
parliament" to save the nation. To do so, however, would lay him open to
that other child, christened Shiva, who has grown up to be a brutish killer.
Saleem's dilemma plays out against the backdrop of the first years of
independence: the partition of India and Pakistan, the ascendancy of "The
Widow" Indira Gandhi, war, and, eventually, the imposition of martial law.
We've seen this mix of magical thinking and political reality before in the
works of Günter Grass and Gabriel García Márquez. What sets Rushdie apart is
his mad prose pyrotechnics, the exuberant acrobatics of rhyme and alliteration,
pun, wordplay, proper and "Babu" English chasing each other across the
page in a dizzying, exhilarating cataract of words. Rushdie can be
laugh-out-loud funny, but make no mistake--this is an angry book, and its
author's outrage lends his language wings. Midnight's Children is Salman
Rushdie's irate, affectionate love song to his native land--not so different
from a Bombay talkie, after all. --Alix Wilber
Book Description
"An extraordinary novel . . . one of the most important to come out of the
English-speaking world in this generation. [It] is to modern India what Gunter
Grass's The Tin Drum is to modern Germany."-- Robert Towers, The New York
Times Book Review
Packaged with French flaps, acid-free paper, and rough front. --This text
refers to the Paperback edition.