The Enchantress Of Florence (Paperback)

Author: Salman Rushdie
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Format: Paperback
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Product Summary
Format: Paperback
ISBN: 9780676977592
Publisher: RANCN
Publish Date: 5/1/2009
Buy.com Sku: 211067834
Item#:
Dimensions (in Inches) 7.75H x 5.25L x 0.75T
 
Annotation:
Booker Prize-winner Sir Salman Rushdie allows his fantastical tendencies full reign in his sprawling and whimsical ENCHANTRESS OF FLORENCE, a literary riff on the THOUSAND AND ONE NIGHTS. By setting his tale in Florence when the Italian town was ruled by the Akbar Empire, Rushdie allows himself to possess the entirety of both Western and Eastern culture, and his novel includes Persian princesses and European knights alike. Familiar historical figures such as Machiavelli make appearances, as does Vlad the Impaler, and the book churns itself into a stew of styles, fairy tales, and cultural and literary allusion.

 

Author Bio
Salman Rushdie
Salman Rushdie was born into a wealthy Indian family two months before India gained its independence. His father was educated at Cambridge and, after practicing law, took over the family business of leather and cloth manufacturing. Rushdie has a degree in history, also from Cambridge. He lived in Pakistan after graduation, where his family had moved, but his involvement with a production of Edward Albee's THE ZOO STORY (a play disapproved of by the Muslim government) forced him to return to England. He worked as an actor, then as an advertising copywriter. His first novel was a failure, but his second, MIDNIGHT'S CHILDREN, won the Booker Prize in 1993 and led to his success. His fourth novel, THE SATANIC VERSES (1988), was banned in India, Pakistan, South Africa, and the Arab states, and in 1989 the Ayatollah Khomeini of Iran proclaimed a fatwa against Rushdie, calling for his death and offering a $2.6 million award for his execution. Rushdie went into hiding under protection from Scotland Yard, and remained largely in seclusion until September 1998, when the fatwa was lifted by a more liberal Iranian regime. Even in hiding, Rushdie continued to write, publishing another novel, a collection of stories, and many essays. In 1994 he was elected president of the newly formed International Parliament of Writers.

 
 
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{1}
In the day’s last light the glowing lake


In the day’s last light the glowing lake below the palace-city looked like a sea of molten gold. A traveller coming this way at sunset — this traveller, coming this way, now, along the lakeshore road — might believe himself to be approaching the throne of a monarch so fabulously wealthy that he could allow a portion of his treasure to be poured into a giant hollow in the earth to dazzle and awe his guests. And as big as the lake of gold was, it must be only a drop drawn from the sea of the larger fortune — the traveller’s imagination could not begin to grasp the size of that mother-ocean! Nor were there guards at the golden water’s edge; was the king so generous, then, that he allowed all his subjects, and perhaps even strangers and visitors like the traveller himself, without hindrance to draw up liquid bounty from the lake? That would indeed be a prince among men, a veritable Prest
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