Rushdie triumphantly returns to literary stage
Fellow writers champion his new work as author continues to recover from attack
In “Victory City,” a new novel by Salman Rushdie, a gifted storyteller and poet creates a new civilization through the sheer power of her imagination. Blessed by a goddess, she lives nearly 240 years, long enough to witness the rise and fall of her empire in southern India, but her lasting legacy is an epic poem.
“All that remains is this city of words,” the poet, Pampa Kampana, writes at the end of her epic, which she buries in a pot as a message for future generations. “Words are the only victors.”
Framed as the text of a rediscovered medieval Sanskrit epic, “Victory City” is about mythmaking, storytelling and the enduring power of language. It is also a triumphant return to the literary stage for Rushdie, who has been withdrawn from public life for months, recovering from a brutal stabbing while onstage during a cultural event in New York last year.
The attack on Rushdie shook the literary world. For decades, Rushdie has been revered not only as a novelist, but also as a free speech icon who faced death threats over his novel “The Satanic Verses,” yet continued to write and speak out against intolerance. After he was attacked, fellow writers and cultural figures expressed outrage and gathered for vigils in his honor.
Now, with the recent release of “Victory City,” writers are again rallying around Rushdie to champion his work. Many see it as a moment to celebrate Rushdie’s exuberant and playful imagination, to turn attention back to his fiction and to savor the fact that
Rushdie is here to witness the reception of his novel. Some say the book’s overarching message — that stories will outlast political clashes, wars, the collapse of empires and civilizations — has taken on a heightened resonance in light of what Rushdie has endured.
“He is saying something quite profound in ‘Victory City,’ ” said novelist Colum McCann, a friend of Rushdie’s. “He’s saying, ‘You will never take the fundamental act of storytelling away from people.’ In the face of danger, even in the face of death, he manages to say that storytelling is one currency we all have.”
Rushdie delivered “Victory City” to his publisher, Random House, in December 2021, and Random House announced the project last summer, not long before Rushdie was attacked.
Rushdie was not available to comment, his publisher said. Friends and fellow writers report that his recovery is progressing; he keeps in touch, has started to plan new writing projects, and is as funny and quick-witted as ever.
Rushdie has long towered as one of the world’s most celebrated writers. He had published 14 previous novels, often fantastical works that blend history and politics with elements of magical realism. Born in Mumbai (then Bombay), India, in 1947, he published his first novel, “Grimus,” a science fiction tale that he has called “justly obscure,” in 1975. In 1981, he published “Midnight’s Children,” a magical realist fable set in India just after the Partition, which won the Booker Prize and launched his career.
Seven years later, his life was upended when he released “The Satanic
Verses,” a novel that included a fictionalized portrayal of the life of the Prophet Muhammad, with depictions that some Muslims considered blasphemous. Shortly after, Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, the supreme leader of Iran, issued a statement calling for
Rushdie’s death, putting a $2.5 million bounty on his head and urging Muslims to target him. Rushdie went into hiding for nearly a decade, an ordeal he recounts in his memoir, “Joseph Anton.”
After the order was rescinded in 1998, Rushdie seemed to relish his renewed freedom, and expressed gratitude to those who had stood by him and defended his right to publish. He moved to New York and became a vibrant fixture in the city’s literary and cultural life.
The reprieve came to an abrupt end in August, when Rushdie was attacked at the Chautauqua Institution, a summer arts community about 75 miles from Buffalo, New York, where he was to give a speech about how the U.S. had become a safe harbor for exiled writers. As the event was about to begin, a man from New Jersey rushed
the stage, according to prosecutors, and stabbed Rushdie in the face and the abdomen before members of the audience pulled him away. The assailant, Hadi Matar, 24, has pleaded not guilty to second-degree attempted murder and assault with a weapon.
“Victory City” builds on many of the themes that have long preoccupied Rushdie — the power of myths and legend to shape history, the conflict between the forces of multiculturalism and pluralism versus fundamentalism and intolerance. In some ways, it’s a shift back to Rushdie’s earlier works — richly imagined, magical realist narratives set in India — and marks a return to his literary roots after his last two novels, both satires that skewer contemporary American politics and culture.
Erica Wagner, an author and critic who moderated a recent event in Rushdie’s honor, said the novel is “a testament to the power of storytelling and the power of words and narrative, for good and ill.”
Some of Rushdie’s friends lamented that Rushdie — who is famously gregarious and extroverted and relishes the limelight — has been forced into isolation at what should be a celebratory moment.
Margaret Atwood, who took part in the panel about “Victory City” along with Wagner and author Neil Gaiman, said she felt an obligation to speak about Rushdie’s latest work, given that he was not in a position to appear publicly himself.
“You have to, as it were, foil the attempt to shut him down,” Atwood said.
“He’s been through so much, being in hiding for all those years, feeling under threat of death,” she added. “He is, above all, a storyteller.”