|

New & Current Releases
Archives: A-Z By Title
Archives: A-Z By Author
Advanced Search
All-Time High Scores
Best Of 2006
Best Of 2005
Best Of 2004
How Metascores Are Calculated
Discuss Books In Our Forums


Stars indicate the most critically-acclaimed books.
|
Shalimar The Clown
A Novel
by Salman Rushdie
Rushdie's epic ninth novel is set in California, Europe and Kashmir, tracing the stories of an American ambassador to India, his family, and his assassin.
Random House, 416 pages
09/06/2005
$25.95
ISBN: 0679463356
Fiction
General Literature & Fiction

All reviews are classified as one of five grades: Outstanding (4 points), Favorable (3), Mixed (2), Unfavorable (1) and Terrible (0). To calculate the Metascore, we divide total points achieved by the total points possible (i.e., 4 x the number of reviews), with the resulting percentage (multiplied by 100) being the Metascore. Learn more...
Atlantic Monthly Christopher Hitchens
Breathtakingly well done.... This is a highly serious novel, on an extremely serious subject, by a deeply serious man.

Kirkus Reviews
A magical-realist masterpiece.

Publishers Weekly William T. Vollman
Shalimar the Clown is a powerful parable about the willing and unwilling subversion of multiculturalism.

Washington Post Ron Charles
Modern thriller, Ramayan epic, courtroom drama, slapstick comedy, wartime adventure, political satire, village legend -- they're all blended here magnificently.

Los Angeles Times Jonathan Levi
Rushdie's greatest novel since The Satanic Verses.... Transparent, extraordinary writing. [4 Sep 2005]
Chicago Tribune Alan Cheuse
At its most furious, Rushdie's prose rises to moving, chantlike crescendos. [4 Sep 2005]
PopMatters Raquel Laneri
Rushdie's operatic lyricism accompanies the action brilliantly.

New York Observer David Thomson
One revels at Mr. Rushdie’s conjuring up of people who owe as much to heat and dust as to Indian mythology, but who have the sharp tongues and impatient appetites of people raised on Hollywood movies and rock ’n’ roll.
[12 Sep 2005, p. 2]
The Observer Jason Cowley
Shalimar the Clown is Rushdie's most engaging book since Midnight's Children. It is a lament. It is a revenge story. It is a love story. And it is a warning -- to Muslims and to secular pluralists alike.

The Independent Matt Thorne
The story holds up admirably.

USA Today Deirdre Donahue
Like all of [Rushdie's] best work, Shalimar the Clown offers up mythology, Hindu gods and goddesses, folk tales, popular culture, fantastic occurrences and shimmering prose that is a delight simply to read for its references and nuances.

Wall Street Journal Sudha Koul
Enchanting and irritating, profound and self-indulgent.

San Francisco Chronicle Tom Barbash
A vast, richly peopled, beautiful and deeply rageful book that serves as a profound and disturbing artifact of our times.

Boston Globe John Freeman
Shalimar the Clown... is a book about the dark side of storytelling, about its occult power, and everyone abuses it here.

Chicago Sun-Times Hedy Weiss
A complex scheme is at work... but often it feels as if Rushdie is giving us the storyboards for a novel -- devising the sharp outlines of his characters but only partially penetrating their psyches.

Christian Science Monitor Erik Spanberg
A frenzied torrent of ideas, scenes, and observations spill onto every page, leaving the reader either exhausted and exasperated or dizzy and delighted.

Houston Chronicle Edward Nawotke
Rushdie is able like no other writer to reduce global events to individual lives, to marry macro socio-political conflicts to personal stories.

LA Weekly Brendan Bernhard
When he isn’t overegging the pudding or turning every other character into an ethnic caricature -- in short, when he concentrates on the narrative -- Rushdie has a damn good story to tell.

Entertainment Weekly Troy Patterson
[Rushdie] flashily tries to magic-realize a fable of Major Significance.

The New Yorker John Updike
[Rushdie's] seeming insistence on extreme glamour for his characters limits his room for maneuver within fiction’s curious democracy.

Village Voice Joy Press
Rushdie heaps divinations and omens until the novel resembles a 10-prophecy pileup.

The Independent Suhayl Saadi
Shalimar the Clown is a brilliant symphony with some bum notes.

The Guardian Natasha Walter
From the beginning the prose seems to be straining to live up to expectations, and slipping into hyperbole as a result.

The New York Times Book Review Laura Miller
It gets better, but reading the first 100 or so pages of [Shalimar the Clown] often feels like wearing an ill-fitting, itchy sweater.

The Globe And Mail [Toronto] Annabel Lyon
A little too neatly schematic. [10 Sep 2005, p. D6]
The New York Times Michiko Kakutani
[Rushdie's] allegory-making machinery clanks and wheezes.

New York Review Of Books Pankaj Mishra
Simulating a history of pure innocence while speaking of the inevitability of violation, Shalimar the Clown enacts a commonplace intellectual and moral confusion, even as it offers a knowingness more comforting than knowledge.


The average user rating for this book is 8.7 (out of 10) based on 7 User Votes
Note: User votes are NOT included in the Metascore calculation.
Discuss this book in our forums |
|