Salman Rushdiein a sentence
- The book was called The Satanic Verses by Salman Rushdie, and it was a parody of the life of the Prophet, PBUH, set in Bombay.† (source)
- When Salman Rushdie wrote The Satanic Verses (1988), he caused his characters to parody (inorder to show their wickedness, among other things) certain events and persons from the Koran and the life of the Prophet.† (source)
- Salman Rushdie, one of the most censored authors of our time, talked about the importance of books.† (source)
- Salman Rushdie's irony in The Satanic Verses did not register with certain Muslim clerics.† (source)
- At almost the exact same moment (the novels were published within months of each other), Fay Weldon and Salman Rushdie introduced characters—two in each case—falling from great heights, from exploding airliners.† (source)
- Fay Weldon, in The Hearts and Lives of Men (1988), and Salman Rushdie, in The Satanic Verses, may have slightly different purposes in introducing such massive violence into their story lines and then having some characters survive.† (source)