The book in my hand could very well have had this decidedly tasteless name were it not for Salman Rushdie’s police protection team’s disapproval.
They thought it was a “bit of a mouthful, too hard to remember, and far too Asia” to work.
He had to find a new alias or, as some might suggest — not including yours truly — a nom de guerre.
Joseph Anton was what he came up with after combining the names of two of his favorite writers: Joseph Conrad and Anton Chekhov.
Written in the third person, Joseph Anton talks about Rushdie’s relationship with his father, his troubled married life and his professional struggle in becoming an established writer.
Rushdie’s is a story of a boy who goes to a boarding school thousands of miles away from his beloved hometown and abusive father. In this alien land, he searches for his identity.
He wants to be an Indian without giving up his life in the west and remain a Muslim without being asked to believe in Islamic myths.
Most people can’t keep a balance in such situations and sooner or later fall to one side, but not Rushdie; he is of that curious race which is “godless, but fascinated by gods and prophets, and doesn’t forget its home even after abandoning it.”
At Cambridge, he is the only student to take the course ‘Muhammad’, offered for the first time.
During the course, he reads about ‘the satanic verses’, an apocryphal incident in Islamic history.
To Rushdie, for whom religion is little more than popular mythology, this is simply the seed for a ‘good story.’
There is no need to critically analyse the text for his is a storyteller’s mind and it only searches for stories.
After the lukewarm reception of his first few books, he flies to India to “drink deeply” from her well and starts working on Midnight’s Children.
The book receives favourable reviews and thus begins, for the next nine years, the life Rushdie always dreamt of. The Satanic Verses receives lucrative offers for obtaining its English-language publishing rights and the first few reviews treat it as a piece of literature.
Then comes Ayatollah Khomeini and his fatwa, and all becomes dark. In hiding, he would write: “I am gagged and imprisoned, I can’t even speak. I want to kick a football in a park with my son.”
Just one story and an “ordinary, banal life” became an impossible dream.
Rushdie feels that all hell truly broke loose the day the Indian newspaper India Today published an inflammatory review of his book before the actual publication date of the book.
Later on, following agitation by two Indian Muslim MPs, the book was banned in India, prompting Rushdie to write an angry and — as he admits himself — “arrogant” letter to former Indian prime minister Rajiv Gandhi.
For him, the segregation from his one half (Muslim) was bad enough, to know that the other was severing the connection too was terrible.
And now I must digress. Rushdie hates Pakistan. The Pakistanis hate him too, and I didn’t think there was any reason to recommend this book until September 21, when I read an article written by Ayaz Amir.
Amir wrote that “all the books Salman Rushdie has written didn’t bring him a tenth of the notoriety or fame our rage against him did.” I am no statistician but his assertion seems wrong.
Midnight’s Children had won the Booker Prize eight years before the publication of The Satanic Verses, and Shame was shortlisted for the Booker Prize and its Persian translation received an award in Iran.
Joseph Anton is a book that comes once in a while. It’s not a book that has to be read because it was written by someone with seven bestsellers to his credit.
It has to be read because it’s a book which transforms a condemned heretic who wrote a collection of blasphemous words into a human being.
Published in The Express Tribune, Sunday Magazine, October 14th, 2012.
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COMMENTS (12)
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@Sayyed Mehdi: Absolutely right. Salman Rushdie wrote something that many here don't like without ever reading the book or even seeing it. Ignore the folks such as this guy (talking about Hitler and all, forgive him for he is ignorant and it shows.
@Sayyed Mehdi i dont think Hitler shot anyone himself too, right? So i guess u r saying instrument has no value?
@Brutus: Thank you for bestowing this honour of comparing me to Salaman Rushdie....What an honour, thank you. I must confess to being a short story writer but knowing my limitations would never eqaul in the magnificence of his style and verbage in writing. He is an inventor of english writing.
You are right I cannot be sane, thank you, for being so audacious but truly I like my insanity better than your ignorance. Please keep your head in sand, as you are the mighty majority, steeped in fanaticism and religious paranoia, with no capability of reflection. You are the mouthpiece of the fast spreading ignorance in this world.
My Very Best Regards to you, Sir!!! May Peace Be Upon Thee.....
@Genesis: I thought so too and yet to my mind, he is and will be declared as one of the most innovative writers of this century.
For he is a Picasso of writing...who has a uniquely different style of writing..
The reason people cannot like his writing technique and cannot go past 15 or 35 pages, is because Salman Rushdie writes on global issues in his historical fantasy way, which simply questions what is ingrained in majority of the populations of the world, the beliefs of living in a fundamentalistic religion (for example), with no space for sensible discourse...
His multi layered writing is tedious and boring... till a reader starts to tune into the real soul of thought underneath it, till a reader truly tries to make his brain to think... So, then, what is the point of reading him? Their interest is piqued by the notoriety this writer has gained and so becomes an object of ridicule by the illiterate of mind and a 'must' in fashionable circles, who need something to make fun of in their boring lives...
Remember, his book Midnight children won him the Booker before Satanic Verses was published. To the unbiased reader (rare bird!), I would recommend reading one of his earlier works, 'Haroun and the sea of stories' and you will discover the writer to be a magician of the art of writing...
My humble opinion of Salman Rushdie is, He is and will, in future, be declared as one of the greatest writers of this century...( thoughts by one who read his Midnight Children and thought it to be tedious and boring)
@Sayyed Mehdi
Very well put.
Before all these views on Rushdie are expressed how many have read his books or for that matter The Satanic verses.I have tried to read Satanic verses but could not.It is tedious and boring!!!!
@Muhammad Your comparison is flat-out off the mark. Rushdie never harmed anyone, let alone commit a holocaust. He just wrote something you didn't like. That doesn't make him inhuman.
@muhammad: O ye with the most popular name, have you ever heard of Reductio ad Hitlerum????
and Hitler was not made of iron ore either. He was living breathing Human being. The guy who inaugurated Olympic Games in Berlin. People just loved him them.
It transforms that Holocaust ushering maniac into a human being....no wonder!