Archive for February, 2023

SALMAN RUSHDIE’S ‘VICTORY CITY’: PUBLICATION DAY

Today, 7 February 2023, is official publication day for ‘Victory City’, at the age of 75 Salman Rushdie’s twenty-first book and sixteenth work of fiction. Reviews are out already, for the most part favourable but at the same time alarmed. Without exception, readings of a novel set in India that combines historical fiction and magic realism will inevitably be coloured (even should they consciously not mention it) by the appalling circumstance of the attack on his life in New York state on 12 August 2022, which has left him with life-changing injuries including the loss of an eye, a kidney and the use of a hand. The novel was finished and with the publishers before that attack, but the fact that it happened will now inevitably affect reviewers’ and readers’ interpretations, and meantime Rushdie will be unable to promote the book in person. Whatever the presumed perpetrator may say, that heinous act was, 33 years on, obviously in implementation – partial but intended as full – of Ayatollah Khomeini’s fatwa of 14 February 1989.

The eminent French critic Roland Barthes wrote in his day of the ‘death of the author’, arguing that determining the meaning of a literary text may be confided to the reader. That philosophy fostered a whole generation of textual (rather than biographical) readings of literature. Such concerns are reflected today in the debates over whether one can or cannot separate the art from the artist. In the case of Rushdie, it is, paradoxically, the intended – and all but brought about – literal death of the author that now renders virtually impossible the application to this novel of the Barthesian death of the author. In the circumstances, roman à clef readings and various forms of biographical overinterpretation may be expected. I have just received my copy of Rushdie’s book and will be reviewing it as soon as I have read it. I cannot project in advance in what will consist my reading amid so many, but while I feel this is likely to prove to be one of the best of its author’s works, I am sure that, for us all, in order to read this novel it will be impossible not to take into account not only the intended or imagined death, but also, quite literally and in its different dimensions, the life of the author.

Note: for my review, see entry for 13 March 2023 on this blog.

Two new reviews of my book ‘Read Books, Repeat Quotations: The Literary Bob Dylan’

Two new reviews of my book ‘Read Books, Repeat Quotations: The Literary Bob Dylan’

My book of 2021, ‘Read Books, Repeat Quotations: The Literary Bob Dylan’, has now attracted a total of five (all favourable) reviews, and I am pleased to share details of two new ones, both published in Spain (in English). For earlier reviews, please see my blog entry for 17 January 2022).

Review by Nadia López-Peláez Akalay, The Grove: Working Papers on English Studies

(University of Jaén, Spain), Vol 29, 2022, pp. 153-156 http://revistaselectronicas.ujaen.es/index.php/grove/article/view/7565

Review by Marita Nadal Blasco, Nexus (Spain), 2002-2, pp.73-75

Nexus is a online-only journal. The Grove exists both online and in print.  

My thanks to both reviewers !

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Details of my book are :

Christopher Rollason, ‘Read Books, Repeat Quotations’: The Literary Bob Dylan, Gateshead (UK), Two Riders, 2021 – 221 pp., paperback, ISBN 978-1-9196390-0-0

See :

http://www.two-riders.co.uk/rollason.html

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The Dylan Review Vol. 4, No. 2, with review of Greil Marcus, Folk Music

Now online is the latest issue (Vol. 4, No. 2, Fall/Winter 2022/2023) of the scholarly journal The Dylan Review: https://thedylanreview.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/02/Dylan-Review-4.2-Fall-Winter-2022-23.pdf

Among the interesting and varied contributions are Jonathan Hodgers’ excellent review of Dylan’s The Philosophy of Modern Song, Richard Thomas’s erudite classicist’s reading of Raphael Falco’s ‘No One to Meet’, Nicholas Bornholt’s reverberative dissection of ‘Blind Willie McTell’, and Robert Reginio’s full report on the 2022 Tulsa conference on ‘Dylan and the Beats’.

Also included is my own review of Greil Marcus’s latest book, ‘Folk Music: a Dylan biography in seven songs’,

https://thedylanreview.org/2023/02/01/review-of-folk-music-a-dylan-biography-in-seven-songs/ (Christopher Rollason, pp. 14-20).