Shame
By (Author) Salman Rushdie
Vintage Publishing
Vintage
4th July 1995
18th May 1995
United Kingdom
General
Fiction
Fiction: Traditional stories, myths and fairy tales
823.914
Paperback
288
Width 129mm, Height 198mm, Spine 17mm
202g
A masterful combination of history, myth, art, language, politics and religion from this legendary writer. The novel that set the stage for his modern classic, The Satanic Verses, Shame is Salman Rushdie's phantasmagoric epic Omar Khayyam Shakil had three mothers who shared everything. They shared the symptoms of pregnancy, they shared the son that they all claim to have borne on the same night. Raised at their six breasts, Omar's mothers teach him to live a life without shame. And it is training that proves very useful when he leaves his mothers' fortress and makes the fateful mistake of falling in love. For he finds himself an unwitting player in an ongoing duel between the families of two men - one a celebrated wager of war, the other a debauched lover of pleasure - living in a world caught between honour and humiliation, where a moment of shame could prove fatal. 'Shame is every bit as good as Midnight's Children. It is a pitch-black comedy of public life and historical imperatives' The Times
It is an astute, gleeful, political tale in which Rushdie dazzles with his prodigious gift for satire. * Guardian *
Salman Rushdie has earned the right to be called one of our great story tellers * Observer *
There can seldom have been so robust and baroque an incarnation of the political novel as Shame. It can be read as a fable, polemic or excoriation; as history or as fiction... This is the novel as myth and as satire * Sunday Telegraph *
Shame is every bit as good as Midnight's Children. It is a pitch-black comedy of public life and historical imperatives * The Times *
Salman Rushdie is a magnificent writer. He has a free-ranging imagination and a coarse, strong wit. He attackes language with energy and without constraint * Independent *
Sir Salman Rushdie has received many awards for his writing, including the European Union's Aristeion Prize for Literature. He is a Fellow of the Royal Society of Literature and Commandeur de l'Ordre des Arts et des Lettres. In 1993 Midnight's Children was judged to be the 'Booker of Bookers', the best novel to have won the Booker Prize in its first 25 years. In June 2007 he received a knighthood in the Queen's Birthday Honours.