Chicago Tribune (Sunday)

Rushdie defends extraordin­ary in ‘Languages of Truth: Essays’

- By Dwight Garner

Salman Rushdie has nothing to prove. Yet he finds himself, in his early 70s, deeply out of fashion.

Too old to seize a moment, too active to be rediscover­ed, he’s been subject over the past two decades to some of the unkindest reviews ever delivered to a talent of his magnitude.

The rap against Rushdie’s fiction is that it has become increasing­ly “magical,” wonder-filled and windy, as if he were typing in turquoise and burnt sienna. His novels are tricked out with genies and tarot cards and magic mirrors and references to things like evil chicken entrails powder and witches and dragon ladies. These production­s feel forced: talky, infelicito­us and banal. They have no middle gear, and no real humans wander through them.

In his new book, “Languages of Truth: Essays 2003-2020,” Rushdie attempts to perform a defensive castling move. He suggests his work has been misunderst­ood and mistreated because the literary culture has turned from brio-filled imaginativ­e writing toward the humbler delights of “autofictio­n,” as exemplifie­d by the work of Elena Ferrante and Karl Ove Knausgaard.

Rushdie fears that writers no longer trust their imaginatio­ns, and that the classroom imperative to “write what you know” has led to dullness, angst and dead ends: cold and bony literary mumblecore.

There is nothing ordinary about ordinary life, Rushdie writes. Behind closed doors, family existence is “overblown and operatic and monstrous

and almost too much to bear; there are mad grandfathe­rs in there, and wicked aunts and corrupt brothers and nymphomani­ac sisters.” He praises the “giant belchers” and “breakers of giant winds.”

I read Rushdie’s arguments with much interest and little agreement, as Arthur M. Schlesinge­r Jr. used to say. He is fencing with a poorly stuffed straw man. For one thing, there have been autobiogra­phical novels — “David Copperfiel­d” is one — since the form was invented.

And if there has been a boomlet in autofictio­n, it is surely in part an attempt by writers to claw back breathing space from the culture-strangling juggernaut­s that are Marvel movies and J.K. Rowling’s Harry Potter universe and George R.R. Martin’s “Game of Thrones.” Fantasy has quite won over America, in nearly every sphere.

What’s more, contra Rushdie, we’re in a fat period for deep and sustained invention in literary fiction.

Two examples: Among the most revered and popular novels of the past decade are Colson Whitehead’s “The Undergroun­d Railroad” and George Saunders’ “Lincoln in the Bardo.”

Much of the rest in “Languages of Truth” is limper and less interestin­g. The book contains several sleepwalki­ng commenceme­nt speeches (“new beginnings, no matter how exciting, also involve loss”), semi-obligatory memorial lectures (“to achieve your dream you leave your safe place”) and the introducti­ons to books and speeches delivered on behalf of PEN America, of which he was president from 2004 to 2006.

It’s interestin­g to compare “Languages of Truth” with another book of Rushdie’s nonfiction, “Imaginary Homelands,” published in 1991. It’s a mighty book — one of his three or four best, in my view — a lover’s quarrel with the world of politics and novels and film.

Back then Rushdie wrote nonfiction for editors, not for foundation­s and colleges. He was not a major critic but a strong one, and he wrote exactingly, and not always positively, about writers including John le Carré, Grace Paley and Julian Barnes.

He stopped writing reviews almost entirely, he wrote in “Joseph Anton,” his 2012 memoir, because, “If you loved a book, the author thought your praise no more than his rightful due, and if you didn’t like it, you made enemies.” He added: “It’s a mug’s game.”

He may be right. But the irritable Rushdie felt like the real one, or at least the wide-awake one. If his arguments about the state of fiction in “Languages of Truth” don’t convince, at least they’re genuine signs of life.

 ??  ?? ‘Languages of Truth: Essays 2003-2020’ By Salman Rushdie; Random House, 356 pages, $28
‘Languages of Truth: Essays 2003-2020’ By Salman Rushdie; Random House, 356 pages, $28

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