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Midnight's Children by Salman Rushdie
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Midnight's Children: A Novel

by Salman Rushdie

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5,71579299 (4.14)281
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Random House Trade Paperbacks (2006), Paperback, 560 pages

Member:shigekuni
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Brilliant, extraordinary, Rushdie is a storyteller par excellence and he truly dazzles in this epic tale.

The novel begins at the stroke of midnight 15 Aug 1947, we are in Bombay and witness to the birth of one Saleem Sinai which coincides with the exact moment of India's independence from British colonial rule and the creation of the new state, Pakistan. Within that magical hour of midnight a thousand other children were born. Gifted with extrasensory powers, they are midnight's children, and as destined, their fate will be intertwined with that of their country. Sinai's own gift is his oft-ridiculed ugly nose through which he can “smell”his way into other people's thoughts. This is how he learns about many things including certain dark secrets such as the realization that he was not who he thought he was.

Sinai here, is a storyteller and from him, we travel across time, from his grandparents' romance up to his own 31st birthday, and across India and Pakistan during this tumultous and exhilarating infancy phase of the two nations. We are carried away in a hallucinatory and dizzying fashion into the midst of great events and conflicts, into the minute but never boring details of people's lives --- his own family's, his neighbors, into the minds of politicians and millitary leaders, into the enlightened conferences he holds mentally with the other magical children, into his roller-coaster incredible life when he leaves for Pakistan and later, on his return to India. Rushdie's prose is vivid and intensely sensory, with a stark humor that is underlined with sensitivity, and throughout, characterized by rich metaphor and an extreme and superb playfulness with words and expression which only the best of writers dare or are able to do.

This book is a grand celebration, an indictment, a history, a biography, a metaphor, a literary tour de force. Rushdie, in this tale, brings magico-realism, as well as non-linear narration to another level. Either you will love this book or hate it, and intensely either way. I loved this book even better than One Hundred Years of Solitude, which I thought was difficult to top when I read it two decades (!) ago. Why I waited this long to read this book, I honestly don't know. ( )
1 vote deebee1 | Oct 31, 2009 |
This is my third encounter with Salman Rushdie, and this book is a much harder read than Haroun and the Sea of Stories, but it's not quite as bad as The Satanic Verses, thankfully. Being able to read it in long chunks probably helped, too. There's probably not much I can say about this book that hasn't already been said than wiser men than I, so I'll just stick to one small point: Midnight's Children is hilarious. I wasn't expecting that, though I should've known Rushdie was capable of humor after Haroun. The jokes come fast and furious, especially during Saleem's childhood; I think my favorite is about the man who kills his wife and her lover, but frightens off the traffic cop he tries to turn himself in to. I laughed so hard at that one.

There's lots of good lines, too, such as this one about a growing fetus: "What had been (at the beginning) no bigger than a full stop had expanded into a comma, a word, a sentence, a paragraph, a chapter; now it was bursting into more complex developments, becoming, one might say, a book--perhaps an encyclopedia--even a whole language..." And a whole language is exactly what Rushdie has created here.
  Stevil2001 | Oct 25, 2009 |
Midnight's Children has been a challenge to read for the last few weeks. At times I wondered how a novel full of children blessed with varying magical powers for being born at midnight on the day of India's birth as a post-colonial nation, the history of a family fraught with its own destinies and secrets, the very history of India, a burgeoning love story and a story of an obsession with pickles could really ever meld together.

How? It's an alchemy of magical realism, a narrator who carries with him a certain amount of admitted unreliability and a character who serves to remind our narrator that there are interested readers attempting to get through a story. Painted on the canvas of postcolonial India with a brush under the direction of Salman Rushdie, this all comes together and becomes a worth-while endeavor. ( )
2 vote stephmo | Oct 24, 2009 |
The man can write, I certainly won't argue that. There were several things about this novel that really struck me - the passage where a young Saleem exposes the infidelity of Commander Sabarmati's wife, the ghost of Joe D'Costa, etc. In many ways, Rushdie is genius.

As much as I wanted to enjoy this book though, most of the time I didn't. I'm not sure why - was the style that threw me off, or something else? I found myself finishing it for the sake of finishing it. ( )
  bookwormam | Oct 6, 2009 |
In Midnight’s Children, magic realism has this kind of function, to highlight the absurdity of the political scene in post-Independence India, and to expose the complex nature of the relationship between the individual and their position in history. The central project of the novel is to answer this question: How, in what terms, may the fate of a single individual be said to impinge on the fate of the nation? And it does so with an astonishingly bravura performance, in which the extraordinary events of modern Indian history are related while at the same time examining the acts of writing, language, of memory, story telling, and the forging of identity, both personal and national. These issues are foregrounded in three main ways.

First, the narrative voice. The narrator, Saleem Sinai, is writing/telling his story to his assistant and friend, Padma, in a pickle factory. Rushdie’s/Saleem’s writing is intense and vivid and very beautiful: Like scraps of memory, sheets of newsprint used to bowl through the magicians’ colony in the silent midnight wind. Most of the considerable pleasure in reading the novel comes from the texture of the sentences and language.

Read the full review on The Lectern:

http://thelectern.blogspot.com/2009/0... ( )
10 vote tomcatMurr | Aug 24, 2009 |
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Series (with order)
Canonical Title
Original publication date
People/Characters
Important places
Important events
Awards and honors
Epigraph
Dedication
For Zafar Rushdie
who, contrary to all expectations,
was born in the afternoon.
First words
I was born in the city of Bombay . . . once upon a time.
Quotations
Last words
(Click to show. Warning: May contain spoilers.)
Disambiguation notice
Publisher's editors
Blurbers
Canonical titleMidnight's Children
Original publication date1981
People/CharactersSaleem Sinai, Jamila Singer, Aadam Aziz, Tai, Naseem Ghani, Ghani (show all 49)
Important placesIndia, Pakistan
Important eventsPartition of India, Indo-Pakistani War of 1965
Awards and honorsBooker Prize (1981), James Tait Black Memorial Prize (Fiction, 1981), English-Speaking Union Award (1981), Booker of Bookers 25th Anniversary (1993), Waterstones Books of the Century (1997, No 25), Time's All-Time 100 Novels selection (show all 17)
DedicationFor Zafar Rushdie
who, contrary to all expectations,
was born in the afternoon.
First wordsI was born in the city of Bombay . . . once upon a time.
Last words(Click to show. Warning: May contain spoilers.)
Book description

Amazon.com (ISBN 0140132708, Paperback)

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

(retrieved from Amazon Fri, 24 Apr 2009 07:58:00 -0400)

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