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Reviews tagging 'Body horror'
Knife: Meditations After an Attempted Murder by Salman Rushdie
8 reviews
torturedreadersdept's review against another edition
4.0
Graphic: Body horror, Cancer, Chronic illness, Cursing, Death, Violence, Blood, Islamophobia, Medical content, Medical trauma, and Injury/Injury detail
lilivdw's review against another edition
3.5
Graphic: Body horror, Violence, Medical content, Medical trauma, and Injury/Injury detail
forlorn_traveller's review against another edition
5.0
Graphic: Body horror, Violence, Blood, Medical content, and Medical trauma
steveatwaywords's review against another edition
3.75
What makes this brief memoir stand out for me, then, is not that I have long respected the sometimes captious Rushdie, or that the telling of his painful bodily journey is so honestly exposed. Along the way, Rushdie has to face again the narrative of The Satanic Verses he had long hoped to have set aside. The great weight of his career has fallen after the fatwa was declared against him in 1988 and compelled him to live under anonymous security for years afterwards. And though our attacker (who Rushdie only called "The A") does not seem to have been overtly motivated by that declaration, we all of us thought it. And hence it returns.
Rushdie does two things in this book, then, that I was awed by. The first is to underscore again his position on free speech and free thinking, of the responsibility writers have to their own integrity and to the word itself. Passing through such a grave trauma, Rushdie actively and thoughtfully chooses not to capitulate. The second fascinating strategy is in the confrontation with his attacker. Understanding that the resolution he seeks must be one for himself, he chooses not to rely on such an external meeting with an antagonist and would-be assassin to determine that recovery. Instead, Rushdie composes his own dialogue with "The A," and we discover what is important, after all, in confronting irrationality, terror, ignorance.
As we all wrestle with our own environments of irrationality and uncertainty, that's a self-reflection which strikes me as most vital. And somehow, I came away from the book with gratitude.
Graphic: Body horror, Violence, Medical content, and Injury/Injury detail
Rushdie goes into fairly explicit detail of the serious knife attack and physical injuries he sustained, as well as the recovery afterwards.amachonis's review against another edition
4.0
Graphic: Body horror and Violence
kurtwombat's review against another edition
4.25
Moderate: Body horror, Hate crime, and Violence
_fuchsiagroan_'s review against another edition
4.25
Graphic: Body horror, Blood, and Murder
himpersonal's review against another edition
5.0
Graphic: Ableism, Alcoholism, Body horror, Cancer, Confinement, Drug use, Racism, Sexism, Slavery, Violence, Blood, Medical content, Grief, Religious bigotry, Death of parent, Colonisation, Injury/Injury detail, and Pandemic/Epidemic