Salman Rushdie's literary return to his native India.
Rendered in the style of an ancient Indian epic, the novel City of Victory is a sweeping narrative of transcendent love, gripping adventures across time and age-old ethical dilemmas.
A minor battle between two forgotten principalities in fourteenth-century South India brings together a goddess and a child. The virginal Pampa Kampana becomes the conduit of divine will and creates an unprecedented miracle - the magnificent Bisnaga, the "city of victory." Sprouted with magical seeds, the city is established as a centre of women's equality in a patriarchal world. Years pass, rulers change, victories and defeats alternate, and Bisnaga slips away from the noble rule of Pampa Campana and takes a dangerous and disastrous path...
Salman Rushdie
Sir Ahmed Salman Rushdie (born 19 June 1947) is a British Indian novelist and essayist. He became famous with his second novel, Midnight's Children (1981), which brought to him the Booker Prize in 1981. Much of his early fiction is set on the Indian subcontinent. His style is often classified as magical realism mixed with historical fiction, and a dominant theme of his writing is the story of the many connections, disruptions and migrations between the Eastern and Western world.
If India was once the pearl in the crown of the ex-British Empire, the Bombay-born Salman Rushdie is a priceless jewel of his own in the realm of the contemporary English literature. Irreverent, fearless and constantly on the hunt for new, forever more enchanting universes to be discovered, the British-Indian writer has so far built, both through his literary opus magnum and through his public engagements, a reputation of a highly praised and highly controversial modern times genius. His second novel “Midnight Children’ (1981), a masterful depiction of the metamorphoses in post-colonial India, was immediately spotted by the critics and won the Man Booker prize. Upon the publishing of his “Satanic Verses” (1988), probably the most discussed and scandalous piece of modern prose, atrociously accused of being a blasphemy on the Muslim world, humanity turned over night into a pack of insatiable readers. “Shame” (1983) fuses magic and historical realism, in an almost indiscernible fashion, to create of tortured portrait of Pakistan. In 2007 Salman Rushdie was appointed a Knight Bachelor by Her Majesty Elizabeth II for “services in literature”.