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    The Ground Beneath Her Feet - A Novel

    Salman Rushdie

    Henry Holt And Co.
    1999
    575 páginas
    19h 10m
    ISBN-13: 9780965852999
    3
    3 avaliações
    Leram3Lendo1Querem8Relendo0Abandonos0Resenhas0
    Favoritos0Desejados8Avaliaram3

    Time and space, understood conventionally, have never been enough for Rushdie's antic imagination, and here he needs two parallel universes to contain this playful, highly allusive journey through the last 40 years of pop culture. Ormus Cama, a supernaturally gifted musician, and his beloved, Vina Apsara, a half-Indian woman with a soul-thrilling voice, meet in Bombay in the late '50s, discover rock and roll, and form a band that goes on to become the world's most popular musical act. Narrator Rai Merchant, their lifelong friend, is a world-famous photographer and Vina's "backdoor man." Rai tells the story of their great, abiding love (both are named for love gods: Cama as in Kama Sutra, and Vina for Venus), which thrives on obstacles. At first Vina is underage, and Ormus swears not to touch her until she turns 16; then, after one night of love, she disappears for a decade, returning only to rescue Ormus from a near fatal coma. While he swears chastity for a decade, Vina tests their commitment with a string of other lovers, of whom only Rai is kept secret. Ultimately, Ormus and Vina reenact the Orpheus myth, not once but twice. And this is only the heart of a plot whose action moves from Bombay to London to Manhattan. Rai's work as photographer underwrites meditations on 20th-century art and journalism. Rock and roll inspires endless fun, as Rushdie sprinkles lyrics into his narrative, and scrambles pop music names and historyAElvis Presley becomes Jesse Garon Parker, for instance. History is scrambled, too: Watergate turns out to be nothing more than a pulp thriller. The reader slowly discovers that the novel is set in a universe parallel to our own, and the characters catch glimpses of an alternate reality that looks more like our actual world. Despite many comic and dazzling passages, the hyperbole, the scrambled allusions and the parallel universes eventually become wearying. While not one of his masterpieces, this flawed giant is a spirited, head-spinning entertainment from a writer of undeniable genius.

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    3 / 3
    • 5 estrelas0%
    • 4 estrelas67%
    • 3 estrelas0%
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    • 1 estrelas33%
    Ahmed Salman Rushdie profile picture

    Ahmed Salman Rushdie

    Salman Rushdie é um escritor britânico de origem indiana. De família muçulmana liberal e abastada, aos treze anos foi estudar na Inglaterra e lá permaneceu, tendo se tornado súdito britânico. Em 1968 formou-se em história no King's College. Depois de uma breve carreira como ator, passou a dedicar-se à literatura em 1971. Seu romance <i>Os filhos da meia-noite</i> ganhou o prestigioso Booker Prize (1981), o Booker of Bookers (1993) e o Best of the Booker (2008). Já <i>Os versos satânicos</i> (1988) valeu-lhe o Whitbread Prize e uma sentença de morte, promulgada pelo aiatolá Khomeini. O seu estilo narrativo, mesclando o mito e a fantasia com a vida real, tem sido descrito como conectado com o realismo mágico.

    69 Livros
    76 Seguidores
    Maharashtra, Índia

    Ahmed Salman Rushdie