NEW YORK
By HILLEL ITALIEAP National Writer
Salman Rushdie’s new book, โThe Eleventh Hour,โ marks a creative reset for the author. It’s his first fiction work since being attacked on a New York stage in 2022. The book includes two short stories and three novellas, exploring themes of age, mortality, and memory. Rushdie’s recovery has been both physical and creative, with fiction being the last step. He describes the process as a door opening in his mind. Despite the attack, Rushdie has reemerged in public life. Speaking to the AP, he also reflects on the enduring impact of his work.
NEW YORK (AP) โ Salman Rushdie's new book, his 23rd, is also a resetting of his career.
โThe Eleventh Hour,โ which includes two short stories and three novellas, is his first work of fiction since he was brutally stabbed on a New York lecture stage in 2022. His recovery has been physical, psychological โ and creative. Just finding the words for what happened was a painful struggle that culminated with his memoir โKnife,โ published in 2024. Fiction, the ability to imagine, was the last and crucial step, like the awakening of nerves once feared damaged beyond repair.
โWhile I was writing โKnife,โ I couldnโt even think about fiction. I had no space in my head for that,โ Rushdie told The Associated Press last week. โBut almost immediately after I finished the book, before it came out, itโs like this door swung open in my head and I was allowed to enter the room of fiction again.โ
Two of the pieces in his book out Tuesday, โIn the Southโ and โThe Old Man in the Piazza,โ were completed before the attack. But all five share a preoccupation with age, mortality and memory, understandable for an author who will turn 79 next year and survived his attack so narrowly that doctors who rushed to help him initially could not find a pulse.
โThe Eleventh Hourโ draws from Rushdie's past, such as his years as a student in Cambridge, and from sources surprising and mysterious. The title character of โThe Old Man in the Piazza,โ an elderly man treated as a sage, originates from a scene in the original โPink Pantherโ movie, when an aging pedestrian looks on calmly as a wild car chase encircles him. The novella โOklahomaโ was inspired by an exhibit of Franz Kafka's papers that included the manuscript of โAmerika,โ an unfinished novel about a European immigrant's journeys in the U.S., which Kafka never visited.
For โLate,โ Rushdie had expected a straightforward narrative about a student's bond with a Cambridge don, an eminence inspired by author E.M. Forster and World War II code-breaker Alan Turing. But a morbid sentence, which Rushdie cannot remember writing, steered โLateโ to the supernatural.
โI had initially thought that I would have this friendship, this improbable friendship between the young student and this grand old man,โ Rushdie explained. โAnd then I sat down to write it, and the sentence I found on my laptop was, โWhen he woke up that morning, he was dead.โ And I thought, โWhatโs that?โ And I literally didnโt know where it came from. I just left it sitting on my laptop for 24 hours. I went back and looked at it, and then I thought, โYou know, OK, as it happens, Iโve never written a ghost story.โโ
Rushdie will always carry scars from his attack, notably the blinding of his right eye, but he has otherwise reemerged in public life, with planned appearances everywhere from Manhattan to San Francisco. A native of Mumbai, he moved to England in his teens and is now a longtime New Yorker who lives there with his wife, the poet Rachel Eliza Griffiths.
His most celebrated novel is โMidnight's Children,โ his magical narrative of the birth of modern India that won the Booker Prize in 1981. His most famous, and infamous, work, is โThe Satanic Verses,โ in which a dream sequence about the Prophet Muhammad led to allegations of blasphemy, rioting and a 1989 fatwa from Iran's Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini that called for Rushdie's death and drove him into hiding. Although Iran announced in the late 1990s that it would no longer enforce the decree, Rushdie's notoriety continued: The author's assailant, Hadi Matar, was not even born when โSatanic Versesโ was published. Matar, found guilty of manslaughter and attempted murder in a state trial, was sentenced in May to 25 years in prison. A federal trial is still pending.
Rushdie also spoke with the AP about his legacy, his love of cities and how his near-death experience did not make him any more spiritual. This interview has been edited for clarity and brevity.
RUSHDIE: I think about what maybe all of us think about. What do we amount to in the end? What did our life add up to? Was it worth it or was it trivial and forgettable? And if you're an artist, you have the added question of will your work survive? Not just will you survive, but will the things you make endure? Because certainly, if youโre my kind of writer, thatโs what you hope for. And, it would be very disappointing to feel that they would just vanish.
But I really love the fact that โMidnightโs Children,โ which came out in 1981, is still finding young readers, and that is very pleasing to me. That feels like a prize in itself.
RUSHDIE: Yes, and much more than in the others. I think particularly the story called โOklahomaโ is very much a story about storytelling and about truth and lies.
According to (Kafka's friend and literary executor) Max Brod, Kafka had this idea that when his character arrived in Oklahoma, he would find some kind of happiness. He would find some kind of resolution, some kind of fulfillment there. And I often thought the idea of a Kafka book with a happy ending is kind of hard to imagine, so maybe itโs just as well he didnโt write the last chapter. The Oklahoma in the story is entirely fictitious. I mean, he never went anywhere. He never came to America, Kafka. But it becomes like a metaphor of hope and of fulfillment.
RUSHDIE: Itโs why I came to live here, because I was excited by a lot about America. New York City was a place that excited me enormously when I first came here in my 20s, when I was still working in advertising. But I just thought, โI just want to come and put myself here and see what happens.โ I just had an instinct that it would be good for me. And then, you know, life intervened and I didnโt do it for a long time. And then around the turn of the century, I told myself, โWell, if youโre ever going to do it, you better do it, because otherwise, when are you going to do it?โ
RUSHDIE: I like being in the world. You know, one of the things that I have often said to students when theyโre following the kind of โwrite what you knowโ mantra, I said, โYeah, write what you know, but only if what you know is really interesting. And otherwise go find something out, write about that.โ I always use the example of Charles Dickens, because one of the things that impresses me about Dickens is how broad the spectrum of his characters is, that he can write about all walks of life. He could write about pickpockets and archbishops with equal credibility, and that must mean that he went to find things out.
RUSHDIE: I donโt want to be a kind of guru or oracle. I donโt have answers. I have, I hope, interesting questions.
RUSHDIE: No, it just feels like Iโm so glad to have it back. I hope that people reading the book feel a certain kind of joy in it because I certainly felt joyful writing it.
RUSHDIE: Iโm afraid it hasnโt. It has not performed that service.
RUSHDIE: Hitch and myself are still united in that zone of disbelief, aggressive disbelief.