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Salman Rushdie sends “Quixote” by Trumps USA

In his latest novel, Salman Rushdie, Trash-TV, the opioid crisis and racism in the United States to a modernized Version of Miguel de Cervantes’ “Don Quijote linked”.



Salman Rushdie is known for his works with countless references to classical and contemporary culture. With his three recently published novels, he paid tribute to a classic of world literature: in 2015, appeared to be “Two years, eight months and twenty-eight nights”, a tribute to the Oriental narrative series, “a thousand and one nights”. In 2017, the novel “Golden House”, a reference to the ancient writer Apuleius, and his main work followed in “The Golden ass”, also known as “metamorphoses”, the only ancient Latin novel that remained fully intact.

With his latest work “Quixote,” that now appears to be in the United States, presented to the British-Indian author, a modernized Version of Miguel de Cervantes’ “Don Quixote”, is considered the first novel of the modern era. Rushdie’s history plays, however, not in the Spanish town of La Mancha, but in the of Donald Trump-ruled America to a time in which everything seems possible. The Indian-born Protagonist travels across the country, in search of a former Bollywood actress, he has fallen in love with, and the presenter in the United States, meanwhile, was working successfully as a TV.

The seller and his imaginary son, Sancho, are, in turn, Shape the fictional, dreamed up by a Thriller writer named Sam DuChamp, busy also with his own challenging Midlife crisis problems.

“Quixote”- smart, or self-love?

Rushdie’s “Quixote” is on the Shortlist for the Booker Prize in 2019, has not received in the English-speaking media, however, only positive reviews. A reviewer in the New York Times ruled that Rushdie’s “formula” was getting old. The British newspaper “The Guardian” wrote that while it would be interesting to explore the Blurring of fact and fiction. Rushdie’s “Quixote,” but in love, to restless and even, to be more than a Symptom of the ills that he complain.

For the British “Sunday Times”, however, the novel is one of the “smartest meta-fictional antics of the post-modern”. The American review magazine “Kirkus Reviews” praised Rushdie even in the best of shape and called a “Quixote” as a “beautiful piece of literary Satire”.

The American “Library Journal” recommends “Quixote” as a concise, lyrical Meditation on intolerance, addiction to TV and the opioid crisis with a razor-sharp topicality and Humor on several levels-active. The novel was “extraordinary”.

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