Hooray! You have added the first book to your bookshelf. Check it out now!
[−]
  • Search Digit-count Valid ISBN Invalid ISBN Valid Barcode Invalid Barcode

The satanic verses

a novel

By Salman Rushdie

(73)

| Others | 9780307786654

Like The satanic verses?
Join aNobii to see if your friends read it, and discover similar books!

Sign up for free

Book Description

Gibreel Farishta, a legendary Indian movie star, and Saladin Chamcha, the man of a thousand voices, fall earthward from a bombed jet toward the sea, singing ...

Critics

  • Angels in dirty places

    Somebody switches on a tape recorder; a meretricious disco version of a psalm of David, 'How shall I sing the Lord's song in a strange land,' booms and twitters into a semi-apocalyptic version of London. Ellowen Deeowen, as the childrens' rhyme has i ... (read full critics)

    guardian.co.uk published on Sun, 26 Sep 2010

  • Let’s get the hell out of here

    Here, in these three novels, are three representations of the state of the art. In The Satanic Verses the narrator, who may or may not be the Devil, confides that ‘what follows is tragedy.– Or, at least, the echo of tragedy, the full-blooded original ... (read full critics)

    lrb published on Tue, 7 Sep 2010

5 Reviews

Login or Sign Up to write a review
  • "Then she found him. - And maybe he'd invented her, too, a little bit, invented someone worth rushing out of one's old life to love. - Nothing so remarkable in that. Happens often enough; and the two inventors go on, rubbing the rough edges off one another, adjusting their inventions, moulding imagi ... (continue)

    "Then she found him. - And maybe he'd invented her, too, a little bit, invented someone worth rushing out of one's old life to love. - Nothing so remarkable in that. Happens often enough; and the two inventors go on, rubbing the rough edges off one another, adjusting their inventions, moulding imagination to actuality, learning how to be together; or not. It works out or it doesn't."

    "Some days he finds himself among walking corpses, great crowds of the dead, all of them refusing to admit they're done for, corpses mutinously continuining to behave like living people, shopping, catching buses, flirting, going home to make love, smoking cigarettes."

    "'I am nothing,' Ayesha said. 'I am a messenger.'
    'Then tell me why your God is so anxious to destroy the innocent,' Osman raged. 'What's he afraid of? Is he so unconfindent that he needs us to die to prove our love?'"

    "Fact is, [...] religious faith, which encodes the highest aspiration of human race, is now, in our counrty, the servant of lowest instincts, and God is the creature of Evil."

    "I must think of myself, from now on, as living perpetually in the first instant of the future, he resolved [...]. But a history is not so easily shaken off; he was also living, after all, in the present moment of the past."

    Is this helpful?

    Control Freak said on Oct 2, 2011 about the Paperback edition | Add your feedback

  • The Testament meets Tristram Shandy

    It took me 5 years to summon the courage to read it. It took me 2 months to finish it. It's not simple, at all: it's rich, crammed, slow, baroque, preposterous, spiced, honest, all-round, sick, balanced, funny, harsh, new, old. Most of all, it's good, and evil. Its English is smashing. I caught myse ... (continue)

    It took me 5 years to summon the courage to read it. It took me 2 months to finish it. It's not simple, at all: it's rich, crammed, slow, baroque, preposterous, spiced, honest, all-round, sick, balanced, funny, harsh, new, old. Most of all, it's good, and evil. Its English is smashing. I caught myself thinking, more than once, "when I read this again...". This doesn't happen that often!

    Here's my advice: Read it slowly.

    Is this helpful?

    Daniela Vladimirova said on Mar 24, 2011 about the Paperback edition | 2 feedbacks

  • Miracles, and the nature of evil, and no revelation.

    A powerful reflection on ideas, how they change the world, and about the multiplicity of evil; about how inexplicable are the connections between human and divine. The product of an author that knows what to reveal and what to conceal: a masterpiece.

    I'm so involved in reflections about its implica ... (continue)

    A powerful reflection on ideas, how they change the world, and about the multiplicity of evil; about how inexplicable are the connections between human and divine. The product of an author that knows what to reveal and what to conceal: a masterpiece.

    I'm so involved in reflections about its implications, I can barely describe the density of this book. Read it straightaway.

    Is this helpful?

    sturmer said on Jan 16, 2011 about the Paperback edition | Add your feedback

  • Highly Recommended

    This is a brilliant book, my favorite of Rushdie's and one of my general favorites. Rushdie has pieced together layer on top of colorful layer, and his natural humor is present in large quantities. A fascinating look at the Muslim Indian diaspora. I would recommend this to anyone and everyone.

    Is this helpful?

    currerbell said on Oct 29, 2010 about the Paperback edition | Add your feedback

Book Details

Improve data of this book

Prices Change currency & sellers

ISBN Edition List Sale Seller
9780307786654 Others -- -- --
Other editions
+ 3 copies tradable: →
Added to Shelf Added to Wish List

Inline Translation Mode

Left click to navigate, right click to translate.

inline translation guide

or close

Inline translation is not ready for this page yet.

Inline translation mode.

Share this page with your friends.

The viewport has not loaded.