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Salman Rushdie

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Salman Rushdie acknowledges the audience at the Book Fair in Turin, on May 10.

Salman Rushdie’s memoir is the work of a supreme storyteller

The novelist’s account of the brutal attack on him and how he survived is moving, ghastly and full of self-scrutiny.

  • Peter Craven

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Justice Michael Lee (centre) with Brittany Higgins and Bruce Lehrmann.

The best thing about the Lehrmann judgment? Its slowness in a time of dangerous speed

We have increasing difficulty in integrating disparate views, and having civil disagreements. The only antidotes are slowness, nuance, and a tolerance for complexity – all things that are increasingly rare.

  • Jacqueline Maley
Salman Rushdie, photographed by his wife, Rachel Eliza Griffiths.  ″⁣She became my — our — unbreakable rock,″⁣ he writes in Knife.

Did Salman Rushdie foresee the attack that nearly killed him?

Three nights earlier, the acclaimed author had a disturbing dream. It was not his first eerie premonition.

  • JP O'Malley
April books

April books: The attack on Salman Rushdie and rejigging Huck Finn

The book industry is in full swing anticipating cooler weather and more time to read.

  • Jason Steger
Salman Rushdie (left) says Roald Dahl was no angel “but this is absurd censorship”.

Salman Rushdie calls revisions to Roald Dahl books ‘absurd censorship’

Recent changes in Dahl’s children’s books were a joint effort by the publisher and the Roald Dahl Story Company, which manages the works’ copyright and trademarks.

  • Jennifer Hassan
Salman Rushdie pictured before he was attacked in August last year. His latest novel is rooted in fact.

Salman Rushdie’s new novel is a tale of power, exile and steely defiance

The story of a 247-year-old prophetess and poet, Victory City is the author’s 15th novel and the first since he was attacked and severely injured last year.

  • Fiona Gruber
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Author Salman Rushdie - months after being stabbed.

Half-blinded but grateful: Salman Rushdie gives first interview since stabbing

“Well, you know, I’ve been better,” he told The New Yorker. “But, considering what happened, I’m not so bad.”

  • Hillel Italie
Author Salman Rushdie before the attack.

Salman Rushdie lost use of eye and hand from attack, agent says

Rushdie’s agent described the “totally unexpected and illogical” attack as one that couldn’t have been prevented.

Free speech: Author Salman Rushdie or conspiracy theorist Alex Jones.

Stop linking the attack on Salman Rushdie to cancel culture

We ought to consider the complex new fact that liberal society is endangered by many of those vehemently defending free speech.

  • Pankaj Mishra
Reg Lynch

Rushdie got his death threat from the Ayatollah. Now you’re more likely to get one on Twitter

Social media has empowered the censorious, who need no more than a Twitter account to launch malevolent threats against free expression.

  • Jacqueline Maley

Original URL: https://www.watoday.com.au/topic/salman-rushdie-5ak