The Scotsman

Latest novel is my funniest yet, says Rushdie

- DAVID ROBINSON

“These days, all weseem to want is heroism, dreams, Churchilli­an fantasies, lines in the sand and billowing optimism”

RORY STEWART

– Salman Rushdie | Rory Stewart | Adam Nicolson The tents are being dismantled and carted off on lorries; Charlotte Square falls quieter and sadder and starts to imagine autumn.

The Book Festival boards attached to the railings were among the last to go. “We need new stories” they proclaimed. Time for an inquest. Did we?

On the festival’s last day Salman Rushdie made a case for old stories too, or at least for a new take on Cervantes’ classic novel with his own 14th one, Quichotte. (By the way, it’s pronounced Key-shot, although Cervantes would have said Don Key-shotty: anything but Donkey-hoty).

It is, he told chair Jim Naughtie, “quite a weird book”, and judging by the precis – a failed spy writer is trying to connect with his son after dreaming up a novel about a retired Indianamer­ican pharma salesman called Quichotte, whose mind has been scrambled by watching too much TV and who is criss-crossing the country to declare his love to an Oprah-like star – he’s not wrong.

At first Rushdie wasn’t sure about twisting the two stories inside each other, “but as I went on, they started talking to each other”. Encouragin­gly, he added, his agent thought it the funniest thing he’d ever written.

Essentiall­y, thenovel is a road trip – a classic American genre and one flexible enough to turn in any direction. Because the road trip criss-crossed the red states of You-knowwho’s America – Trump is unnamed in the novel because “I don’t f***ing want him in it” – that direction is mainly towards satirising a corrupt, paranoid, opioidridd­led culture. An America that felt lonely, isolated, and lied to, that was so shocked by the election of Obama that it doubled down on its inherent racism. Remember the optimism at the end of Saul Bellow’s 1952 novel The Adventures of Augie March, Rushdie asked, quoting chunks of it (“Look at me, going everywhere! Why, I am a sort of Columbus of those near-at-hand”.) Well, Quichotte is its complete opposite.

For all his gloomsteri­sm (as our own You-knowwho would doubtless call it), Rushdie is even more pessimisti­c about India and Britain. At least Trumpism is reversible next year. Brexit – “the biggest historical mistake I’ve ever seen any country make” – isn’t.

Rory Stewart would undoubtedl­y have agreed

– at least about the no-deal variety. He sounded, if not disillusio­ned, then at least questionin­g whether his kind of politics – of compromise, of mastering messy detail, and of practical reform – is still relevant. These days, he said, all we seem to want is heroism, dreams, Churchilli­an fantasies, lines in the sand and billowing optimism.

The question “how” has, he added, disappeare­d from our political lexicon, and not just over Brexit. He’d been in Glasgow earlier that day and been shown a syringe-strewn heroin “shooting gallery” in Saltmarket. The “how” of solving questions like why twice as many English addicts than Scots were in treatment programmes was, he said, what engaged him in politics.

In practice, he accepted, voting against no-deal Brexit would make many of his fellow Tories look on him as a “traitor” for at least five years, so “trying to be the next PM might not be the most useful thing I could do with my time”. Pity, that.

Talking about drugs brings me straight to

Adam Nicolson ,whoinan engrossing event with artist Tom Hammick, explained why the year William and Dorothy Wordsworth spent with Coleridge in Somerset in 1797 led to some of the most remarkable poetry in the language.

Nicolson briefly went to live there too, to get inside the poets’ minds. Referring to “Kubla Khan”, chair Magnus Linklater asked if this included taking opium. “Of course,” said Nicholson.

“But as many of you will know, it’s not a hallucinog­enic or psychedeli­c drug. It’s a very mattress-y, an opiate of a floating, drifting softness.”

The grey-haired audience nodded sagely, as if this was hardly a new story to any of them.

 ??  ?? 0 Salman Rushdie launched his 14th novel, Quichotte, on the book festival’s final day
0 Salman Rushdie launched his 14th novel, Quichotte, on the book festival’s final day

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