Available Formats
Hardback
Published: 24th November 1995
Paperback
Published: 1st July 2008
Hardback
Published: 20th December 2023
Midnight's Children
By (Author) Salman Rushdie
Everyman
Everyman's Library
24th November 1995
21st September 1995
United Kingdom
General
Fiction
823.914
Winner of Booker of Bookers 1993
Hardback
589
Width 134mm, Height 210mm, Spine 33mm
656g
This is a history of India since independence, seen through the eyes of characters born on the day that independence was granted. The book is a multi-layered narrative, in which the complexities of the sub-continent are projected through the minds of its many characters. "Midnight's Children" was voted in the Booker of Bookers in 1993.
" Extraordinary . . . one of the most important [novels] to come out of the English-speaking world in this generation."
- The New York Review of Books
" The literary map of India is about to be redrawn. . . . Midnight's Children sounds like a continent finding its voice."
- The New York Times
" In Salman Rushdie, India has produced a glittering novelist- one with startling imaginative and intellectual resources, a master of perpetual storytelling."
- The New Yorker
" A marvelous epic . . . Rushdie's prose snaps into playback and flash-forward . . . stopping on images, vistas, and characters of unforgettable presence. Their range is as rich as India herself."
- Newsweek
" Burgeons with life, with exuberance and fantasy . . . Rushdie is a writer of courage, impressive strength, and sheer stylistic brilliance."
- The Washington Post Book World
" Pure story- an ebullient, wildly clowning, satirical, descriptively witty charge of energy."
- Chicago Sun-Times
Salman Rushdie is the author of fourteen novels - Grimus, Midnight's Children (for which he won the Booker Prize and the Best of the Booker), Shame, The Satanic Verses, Haroun and the Sea of Stories, The Moor's Last Sigh, The Ground Beneath Her Feet, Fury, Shalimar the Clown, The Enchantress of Florence, Luka and the Fire of Life, Two Years, Eight Months, and Twenty-Eight Nights, The Golden House and Quichotte (which was shortlisted for the Booker Prize) - and one collection of short stories- East, West. He has also published four works of non-fiction - Joseph Anton, The Jaguar Smile, Imaginary Homelands, and Step Across This Line - and co-edited two anthologies, Mirrorwork and Best American Short Stories 2008. He is a member of the American Academy of Arts and Letters and a Distinguished Writer in Residence at New York University. A former president of PEN American Center, Rushdie was knighted in 2007 for services to literature.