Salman Rushdie

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Live on, survive, for the earth gives forth wonders. It may swallow your heart, but the wonders keep on coming. You stand before them bareheaded, shriven. What is expected of you is attention.
- Salman Rushdie
Collection: Heart
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In today's US, it's possible for almost anyone - women, gays, African-Americans, Jews - to run for, and be elected to, high office.
- Salman Rushdie
Collection: Running
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Meaning is a shaky edifice we build out of scraps, dogmas, childhood injuries, newspaper articles, chance remarks, old fillms, small victories, people hated, people loved; perhaps it is because our sense of what is the case is constructed from such inadequate materials that we defend it so fiercely, even to death.
- Salman Rushdie
Collection: People
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She's no flibberti-gibberti mamzell, but a whir-stir-get-lost-sir bundla dynamite!
- Salman Rushdie
Collection: Lost
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Why speak if you can't manage perfect thoughts, perfect sentences?
- Salman Rushdie
Collection: Perfect
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Believe in your own eyes and you'll get into a lot of trouble, hot water, a mess.
- Salman Rushdie
Collection: Believe
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I am the sum total of everything that went before me, of all I have been seen done, of everything done-to-me. I am everyone everything whose being-in-the-world affected was affected by mine. I am anything that happens after I'm gone which would not have happened if I had not come.
- Salman Rushdie
Collection: Life
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Everything has shape, if you look for it. There is no escape from form.
- Salman Rushdie
Collection: Looks
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I fell victim to the temptation of every autobiographer, to the illusion that since the past exists only in one's memories and the words which strive vainly to encapsulate them, it is possible to create past events simply by saying they occurred.
- Salman Rushdie
Collection: Memories
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How does newness come into the world? How is it born? Of what fusions, translations, conjoinings is it made? How does it survive, extreme and dangerous as it is? What compromises, what deals, what betrayals of its secret nature must it make to stave off the wrecking crew, the exterminating angel, the guillotine? Is birth always a fall? Do angels have wings? Can men fly?
- Salman Rushdie
Collection: Betrayal
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A man who invents himself needs someone to believe in him... Not only the need to be believed in, but the need to believe in another. You've got it: Love.
- Salman Rushdie
Collection: Love
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The real risks for any artist are taken in pushing the work to the limits of what is possible, in the attempt to increase the sum of what it is possible to think. Books become good when they go to this edge and risk falling over it -when they endanger the artist by reason of what he has, or has not, artistically dared.
- Salman Rushdie
Collection: Real
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Music, love, death. Certainly a triangle of sorts; maybe even an eternal one. "The only people who can see the whole picture," he murmured, "are the ones who step out of the frame."
- Salman Rushdie
Collection: Feet
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My heart broke open and history fell in.
- Salman Rushdie
Collection: Heart
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We crave permission openly to become our secret selves.
- Salman Rushdie
Collection: Self
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Whenever someone who knows you disappears, you lose one version of yourself. Yourself as you were seen, as you were judged to be. Lover or enemy, mother or friend, those who know us construct us, and their several knowings slant the different facets of our characters like diamond-cutter's tools. Each such loss is a step leading to the grave, where all versions blend and end.
- Salman Rushdie
Collection: Friends
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What's the use of stories that aren't even true?
- Salman Rushdie
Collection: Stories
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It is commonly and, I believe, accurately said of Pakistan that her women are much more impressive than her men.
- Salman Rushdie
Collection: Believe
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In the end, you write the book that grabs you by the throat and demands to be written.
- Salman Rushdie
Collection: Book
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You can't judge an internal injury by the size of the hole.
- Salman Rushdie
Collection: Judging
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Both John F. Kennedy and Nelson Mandela use the same three-word phrase which in my mind says it all, which is ‘Freedom is indivisible. You can’t slice it up, otherwise it ceases to be freedom. You can dislike Charlie Hebdo … but the fact that you dislike them has nothing to do with their right to speak.
- Salman Rushdie
Collection: Freedom
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I saw Quentin Tarantino's 'Django Unchained,' and you could say a lot of things against it, but it was incredible fun. I don't like blood and gore and I am very squeamish about violence, but Tarantino's violence is actually funny.
- Salman Rushdie
Collection: Fun
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Because I've always felt, whether the fatwa or whatever, the writer's great weapon is the truth and integrity of his voice. And as long as what you're saying is what you truly, honestly believe to be the case, then whatever the consequences, that's fine. That's an honorable position.
- Salman Rushdie
Collection: Truth
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Raif Badawi's is an important voice for all of us to hear.
- Salman Rushdie
Collection: Voice
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Literature is the one place in any society where, within the secrecy of our own heads, we can hear voices talking about everythingin every possible way. The reason for ensuring that that privileged arena is preserved is not that writers want the absolute freedom to say and do whatever they please. It is that we, all of us, readers and writers and citizens and generals and goodmen, need that little, unimportant-looking room. We do not need to call it sacred, but we do need to remember that it is necessary.
- Salman Rushdie
Collection: Voice
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Few topographical boundaries can rival the frontiers of the mind.
- Salman Rushdie
Collection: Imagination
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It just requires so much of you, and most of the time you feel dumb.
- Salman Rushdie
Collection: Dumb
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The beautiful came to this city [Hollywood] in huge pathetic herds, to suffer, to be humiliated, to see the powerful currency of their beauty devalued like the Russian ruble or Argentine peso;to work as bellhops, as bar hostesses, as garbage collectors, as maids. The city was a cliff and they were its stampeding lemmings. At the foot of the cliff was the valley of the broken dolls.
- Salman Rushdie
Collection: Beautiful
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[My work] is a love song to our mongrel selves.
- Salman Rushdie
Collection: Song
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The act of migration puts into crisis everything about the migrating individual or group, everything about identity and selfhood and culture and belief. So if this is a novel about migration it must be that act of putting in question. It must perform the crisis it describes.
- Salman Rushdie
Collection: Identity
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Language upon a silvered tongue affords enchantment enough.
- Salman Rushdie
Collection: Enchantment
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Science fiction is where I started out, really. When I was a kid, I was a complete addict of science fiction. It was one of my earliest interests as a writer, and I've just taken a long time to circle back around to it.
- Salman Rushdie
Collection: Taken
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...The lesson [comic books] taught children- or this child, at any rate- was perhaps the unintentionally radical truth that exceptionality was the greatest and most heroic of values; that those who were unlike the crowd were to be treasured the most lovingly; and that this exceptionality was a treasure so great that it had to be concealed, in ordinary life, beneath what the comic books called a 'secret identity'.
- Salman Rushdie
Collection: Children
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I'm a novelist. Fortunately I don't have to rule the world.
- Salman Rushdie
Collection: Novelists
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One minute you've got a lucky star watching over you and the next instant it's done a bunk.
- Salman Rushdie
Collection: Stars
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When I was growing up, everyone around me was fond of fooling around with words. It was certainly common in my family, but I think it is typical of Bombay, and maybe of India, that there is a sense of play in the way people use language.
- Salman Rushdie
Collection: Growing Up
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That's the trouble with you sad-city types: a place has to be miserable and dull as ditchwater before you believe it's real.
- Salman Rushdie
Collection: Real
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English, no longer an English language, now grows from many roots.
- Salman Rushdie
Collection: Roots
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The thing I really like about Twitter is the speed with which information reaches me. You find out things from Twitter long before they're on the news. That I think is valuable. In terms of actually tweeting myself, I have just lost enthusiasm for it. Maybe I'll do some of it this week to tell people about the PEN Festival and encourage them to show up.
- Salman Rushdie
Collection: Thinking
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Sometimes people have said that Islam, in its own calendar, is still only in the Middle Ages.
- Salman Rushdie
Collection: People
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I suppose authoritarians don't like being made fun of because authoritarian rulers have a very inflated sense of themselves and don't like being deflated, which makes it all the more important to continue to deflate them. These are very courageous people around the world who poke fun from inside these societies. So, we now have to broaden the definition of what we mean by "writer" to include bloggers, cartoonists, song writers, visual artists - all these people are, in different ways, quite brave.
- Salman Rushdie
Collection: Song
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For me, what I've always seen in writers and artists is the courage it takes to make an original work of art. I think the real risks in literature are linguistic and intellectual, and I hope we can highlight those, as well as political courage.
- Salman Rushdie
Collection: Art
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The PEN/Barbara Goldsmith Freedom to Write Award is a way of spotlighting individual cases. If you look at the history of the award, the freedom rate is very high: a very high percentage of people who receive those awards are freed in the next six months to a year. The only weapon there is attention, but interestingly it works.
- Salman Rushdie
Collection: Writing
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The most obvious inspiration to be brave is that we all feel it: you can't have free expression right now in a very wide range of countries. It takes a lot of guts for writers and journalists in those countries to stand up against repression and do what they do. Russia is a case in point where, as you know, journalists have an embarrassing habit of being killed for their reporting.
- Salman Rushdie
Collection: Country
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I want to write novels. I want to write stories. I want to do the stuff that I became a writer to do.
- Salman Rushdie
Collection: Writing
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If you give in to the threat of violence, if you give in to bullying, what you know is that there will be more bullying. There will not be less bullying. If you appease the bully, you make sure that he will bully you some more. Not less. It doesn't solve the problem. It makes the problem worse.
- Salman Rushdie
Collection: Bullying
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One of the problems of truth being censored for a really long time is that people lose the ability to intuit what truth might be, and therefore begin to swallow whatever they're fed. I think that's something that the Chinese have learned very well. They've even managed to persuade quite large segments of the population that the martyrs of Tiananmen were actually an anti-national element. People don't view them as heroes, they see them as troublemakers. There you have a combination of censorship of truth creating a new truth, which is the lie, but it's not seen as such.
- Salman Rushdie
Collection: Lying
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It seems to me it's perfectly possible to vehemently disagree with a piece of work and to say that it's offensive and insulting and so on and so on. And you're absolutely entitled to do that and to speak back, if you like, against that piece of speech with all the vehemence at your disposal. I mean, that's legitimate. Even other things. People have a right to demonstrate.
- Salman Rushdie
Collection: Mean
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Sometimes people have said that Islam, in its own calendar, is still only in the Middle Ages. It's still in the fifteenth century or whatever. And Christianity in the fifteenth century, after all, was full of inquisitions and burnings at the stake, and so on and so on. So give Islam time, and it will reach the point of maturity that other religions have. But Mormonism is much younger than Islam, and it's got there already. So I don't think that's an argument that works.
- Salman Rushdie
Collection: Thinking