169078 men and 71008 women to

date in the UK 

Username:    Password:
Flirtbox UK 

Favourites 

Matches 

bookcorner



Midnight's Children

Salman Rushdie



Midnight's ChildrenBefore Salman Rushdie had that problem with a certain religious-political figure with a serious need to chill out, he'd already shown he was an important literary force. Quite simply, Midnight's Children is amazing--fun, beautiful, erudite, both fairy tale and political narrative told through a supernatural narrator who is caught between different worlds. Though it's a big book, with big themes of India's nationhood and of ethnic and personal identity, it's far from a dry history lesson. Rushdie tells the story in his own brand of magical realism, with a prose of lyrical, transcendent goofiness.




Members who also like the book «Midnight's Children»

  • travellingmike, 27
  • erzulie, 26
  • bds79, 27
  • sagacity, 32
  • muddywellies, 38
  • jc1973, 35
  • More books of Salman Rushdie

  • Haroun and the Sea of Stories
  • Midnight's Children (Everyman's Library Classics)
  • Midnight's Children
  • Step Across This Line
  • Shame
  • Fury
  • Shalimar the Clown
  • The Jaguar Smile: Nicaraguan Journey
  • The Satanic Verses
  • Imaginary Homelands: Essays and Criticism, 1981 to
  • Midnight's Children (Picador Books)
  • Shalimar the Clown
  • Midnight's Children
  • The Satanic Verses
  • Haroun and the Sea of Stories (Puffin Books)
  • The Moor's Last Sigh
  • East, West
  • Haroun and the Sea of Stories
  • Shame
  • The Ground Beneath Her Feet
  • The Enchantress of Florence
  • Midnight's Children (Vintage Classics)
  •