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Monday, July 17, 2006

Handcuffed to History - Rushdie & the Children of Midnight




This is magic realism at its best. Consider this - Saleem Sinai, protagonist and narrator of the story, is born at midnight on 14 August 1947, the exact same time of India's independance. The story then weaves in and out of saleem's journey through life; a life which parallels the life story of india - this is where the magic realism comes in. it is simply brilliant, the way he does this.

Unfortunately, Rushdie's writing style is incredibly long-winded, making the going quite slow. i had to re-read the first chapter twice before i got it, and then it took me four months to finish it! but at the same time, it is this very use of rich language and imagery ('the pickling of time'... 'the chutnification of history') that makes this a great book..

And the cast of characters that rushdie concocts is fantastic, laced with humour and sarcasm (read carefully or you might miss it!). for example, Picture Singh, described as the most charming man on earth (he is a snake charmer), and Tai Bibi - A 512-year-old whore!

The novel won the 1981 Booker Prize and was later awarded the 'Booker of Bookers' Prize in 1993. Not for everyone, though.

7 Comments:

Blogger kona said...

too cheem for my brain...this one...i simple man =))

8:48 AM  
Blogger FlyingMuffyn said...

yes curls, I agree wif your comment on his style. when I tink of the exact word for it, which escapes me now, i will tell u =))

Midnite's Children has been touted as a gd 'starter book' to all of Rusdie's works. I used to spend some time reading his latest, Shalimar The Clown (2005), at the bookshop but nvr got to finishing it. Mebbe I should ;)

9:45 AM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

i want to read harmony silk factory by tash aw next. malaysian author. story based in ipoh.

10:58 AM  
Blogger kona said...

LOR SOR? hahaha =))

4:32 PM  
Blogger FlyingMuffyn said...

Tash Aw? nvr heard of him/her. but any asian writer i m interested. tell mi how it goes k.

6:00 PM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

The Harmony Silk Factory tells the story of Johnny Lim, a Chinese-Malaysian man during and after World War II. Tash Aw's novel is in three parts, with each section telling a different perspective on Johnny's life. The first section is told by his son, Jasper, who searches for the story of his father's life to find out how he became such a despicable man. He finds that his father worked in a British-run tin mine in Malaya, chafing at his poor treatment by his racist masters. The murder of one of his bosses allows him a career change to become a brilliant salesman at the Tiger Brand Trading Company. When Tiger Tan's mysterious death puts Johnny in charge of the company, he marries the most beautiful woman in the valley, Snow Soong. The second section of the book is Snow's diary of a belated honeymoon trip, accompanied by a Japanese professor, Mamoru Kunichika, and a British aesthete, Peter Wormwood. The third section is Peter's remembrance of the same trip, and his fond memories of both Johnny and Snow. The Harmony Silk Factory explores the life of a man as told from three different sources, all with their own memories and limitations. Tash Aw's debut novel has received mostly positive reviews with the London Times saying, "From the clunky unreliability of Jasper, through the pellucid prose of Snow’s journal to the intelligent, slightly camp, aesthetic eloquence of Wormwood, Aw orchestrates a graceful ballet of dissonances and congruences, of echoes and discords."

10:43 PM  
Blogger FlyingMuffyn said...

sounds fabulous! will look out for it at the bookshop.

12:57 AM  

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