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Midnight Children by Salman Rushdie— Book Review
A child is born with no state of mind, blind to the ways of mankind 🎵
[FRENCH Version below — First posted on Goodreads]
👉 Find this review in episode #17 of our KULT podcast (in French) on the theme of Night.
👉 All podcast links (Apple, Spotify, Instagram, Youtube,…)
A child is born (🎵 “with no state of mind, blind to the ways of mankind”🎵) on India’s independence day. The first steps of these two entities evolve in parallel, reminiscent of Gunther Grass’s The Drum.
Midnight Children is fast-paced, zany and messy.
- Magic realism à la Garcia Marquez,
- John Irving-style zany,
- It’s as messy as a lot of things — tons of unimportant characters, storylines that go nowhere…
Linguistic ingenuity is fun at first, and sometimes brilliant (like the metaphorical use of the perforated sheet that grandfather-doctor Aziz is forced to use to examine his future wife).
Some compare this novel to a hyperactive copy of Günter Grass’s Tin Drum. In this novel, we see a young man with special gifts, who is linked to the development of a nation, Germany.