#smrgKİTABEVİ The Satanic Verses - 1988
So begins The Satanic Verses, Salman Rushdie's first novel for five years.
Gibreel and Saladin have been chosen (by whom?) as protagonists in the eternal wrestling match between Good and Evil. But which is which? Can demons be angelic? Can angels be devils in disguise? As the two men tumble through their tale, through time as well as space, towards their final confrontation, we are witnesses to a cycle of extraordinary stories, tales of love and passion, of betrayal and faith: the story of Ayesha, the butterfly-shrouded visionary who leads an Indian village on an impossible pilgrimage; of Allie, the mountain-climber haunted by a ghost who urges her to attempt the ultimate feat a solo ascent of Everest; of murders, metamorphoses and riots in a London 'visible but unseen'; and, centrally, the story of Mahound, the Prophet of Jahilia, the city of sand - Mahound, the recipient of a revelation in which satanic verses mingle with divine.
In this great wheel of a book, where the past and the future chase each other furiously, Salman Rushdie takes us on an epic journey, a journey of tears and laughter, of wonderful stories and astonishing flights of the imagination, a journey towards the evil and the good that lie inseparably entwined within the hearts of women and of men.
Salman Rushdie is the author of the novels Grimus, Midnight's Children (winner of the 1981 Booker Prize, the James Tait Black Memorial Prize and the English- Speaking Union Literary Award) and Shame (winner of the Prix du Meilleur Livre Étranger); of The Jaguar Smile: A Nicaraguan Journey; and of the television films The Riddle of Midnight and The Painter and the Pest. He is a member of the Production Board of the British Film Institute and the Advisory Board of the Institute of Contemporary Arts, and a Fellow of the Royal Society of Literature. Born in Bombay in 1947, he now lives in London. His books have been translated into twenty languages.
(photo: Bridgeman Art Library)
PENGUIN BOOKS LTD VIKING Harmondsworth Middlesex, England
So begins The Satanic Verses, Salman Rushdie's first novel for five years.
Gibreel and Saladin have been chosen (by whom?) as protagonists in the eternal wrestling match between Good and Evil. But which is which? Can demons be angelic? Can angels be devils in disguise? As the two men tumble through their tale, through time as well as space, towards their final confrontation, we are witnesses to a cycle of extraordinary stories, tales of love and passion, of betrayal and faith: the story of Ayesha, the butterfly-shrouded visionary who leads an Indian village on an impossible pilgrimage; of Allie, the mountain-climber haunted by a ghost who urges her to attempt the ultimate feat a solo ascent of Everest; of murders, metamorphoses and riots in a London 'visible but unseen'; and, centrally, the story of Mahound, the Prophet of Jahilia, the city of sand - Mahound, the recipient of a revelation in which satanic verses mingle with divine.
In this great wheel of a book, where the past and the future chase each other furiously, Salman Rushdie takes us on an epic journey, a journey of tears and laughter, of wonderful stories and astonishing flights of the imagination, a journey towards the evil and the good that lie inseparably entwined within the hearts of women and of men.
Salman Rushdie is the author of the novels Grimus, Midnight's Children (winner of the 1981 Booker Prize, the James Tait Black Memorial Prize and the English- Speaking Union Literary Award) and Shame (winner of the Prix du Meilleur Livre Étranger); of The Jaguar Smile: A Nicaraguan Journey; and of the television films The Riddle of Midnight and The Painter and the Pest. He is a member of the Production Board of the British Film Institute and the Advisory Board of the Institute of Contemporary Arts, and a Fellow of the Royal Society of Literature. Born in Bombay in 1947, he now lives in London. His books have been translated into twenty languages.
(photo: Bridgeman Art Library)
PENGUIN BOOKS LTD VIKING Harmondsworth Middlesex, England