Salman Rushdie was born in Bombay, India, and educated in England. He worked in television and in advertising, before becoming an author. His second novel, Midnight's Children, is a comedic telling of Indian history through the eyes of a pickle-factory worker who knows people's souls through the extraordinary powers of his large nose. It won the prestigious Booker Prize, and made Rushdie famous in literary circles.
[1] Rushdie was raised in a Muslim family, but he no longer considers himself to be Muslim.
Father: Anis Ahmed
Mother: Negin Butt Rushdie
Wife: Clarissa Luard (m. 1976, div. 1987, d. 1999, one son)
Son: Zafir Rushdie (b. 1979)
Wife: Marianne Wiggins (m. 28-Jan-1988, div. 2-Mar-1993, one stepdaughter)
Wife: Elizabeth West (m. 28-Aug-1997, div. 2004, one son)
Wife: Padma Lakshmi (actress, m. 17-Apr-2004, div. 2007)
Girlfriend: Pia Glenn (stage actress, ex-, together 2009)
High School: Rugby School
University: King's College, Cambridge University (honors)
International Academy of Humanism Laureate
Secular Coalition for America Advisory Board
Man Booker Prize for Fiction 1981 for Midnight's Children
Knight of the British Empire 2008
Naturalized UK Citizen 1964
Blasphemy
Funeral: Christopher Hitchens (2012)
Risk Factors: Fatwa
FILMOGRAPHY AS ACTOR
Midnight's Children (31-Aug-2012) · Narrator [VOICE]
Then She Found Me (7-Sep-2007) · Dr. Masani
Dirty Pictures (27-May-2000) · Himself
Official Website:
https://www.salmanrushdie.com/
Rotten Library Page:
Salman Rushdie
Author of books:
Grimus (1975, novel)
Midnight's Children (1981, novel)
Shame (1983, novel)
The Jaguar Smile: A Nicaraguan Journey (1987, nonfiction)
The Satanic Verses (1988, novel)
Haroun and the Sea of Stories (1990, novel)
Imaginary Homelands: Essays and Criticism, 1981-1991 (1991, essays)
The Wizard of Oz (1992, nonfiction)
The Rushdie Letters: Freedom to Speak, Freedom to Write (1993, nonfiction)
The Moor's Last Sigh (1995, novel)
The Ground Beneath her Feet (1999, novel)
Conversations with Salman Rushdie (2000, nonfiction)
Fury (2001, novel)
Step Across This Line: Collected Nonfiction 1992-2002 (2002, essays)
The Enchantress Of Florence (2004, novel)
Careless Masters (2005, novel)
Parallelville (2006, novel)