Member LoginMember Login - User registration - Setup as front page - Add to favorites - Sitemap What Salman Rushdie says in 'Knife,' the memoir about his stabbing !

What Salman Rushdie says in 'Knife,' the memoir about his stabbing

Time:2024-04-30 02:24:17 source:Worldly Weave news portal

NEW YORK (AP) — In Salman Rushdie’s first book since the 2022 stabbing that hospitalized him and left him blind in one eye, the author wastes no time reliving the day he thought might be his last.

“At a quarter to eleven on August 12, 2022, on a sunny Friday morning in upstate New York, I was attacked and almost killed by a young man with a knife just after I came out on stage at the amphitheater in Chautauqua to talk about the importance of keeping writers safe from harm,” Rushdie writes in the opening paragraph of the memoir “Knife,” published Tuesday.

At just over 200 pages, “Knife” is a brief work in the canon of Rushdie, among the most exuberant and expansive of contemporary novelists. “Knife” is also his first memoir since “Joseph Anton,” the 2012 publication in which he looked back on the fatwa, the death decree, issued more than 20 years earlier by Iran’s Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini because of the alleged blasphemy in Rushdie’s novel “The Satanic Verses.”

Related information
  • Concert marks Chinese Language Day in Geneva
  • Huawei embraces all
  • Fujian Jinhua 'not guilty' in Micron case
  • Autonomous driving vehicles start commercialized demonstration operation in S China
  • One Extraordinary Photo: AP photographer uses remote camera to make soaring NBA shot
  • Green aviation ecosystem gets bigger thrust
  • Suspected arson latest challenge for Tesla in Europe
  • Number of round
Recommended content
  • Vientos hits 2
  • Fresh priorities define 'future industries'
  • Maglev train with a speed of 600 kilometers per hour debuted at the World Manufacturing Conference
  • NEVs help China to top auto exports
  • Bayer Leverkusen's late escapes are keeping Xabi Alonso's team unbeaten this season
  • More US steps on chips seen as harmful