Les Versets sataniques

Paperback, 588 pages

French language

Published Jan. 13, 1999 by Plon.

ISBN:
978-2-259-18666-7
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OCLC Number:
859057394

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4 stars (4 reviews)

L'éternelle lutte entre le Bien et le Mal, sous la plume débridée, loufoque, baroque de Salman Rushdie.

A l'aube d'un matin d'hiver, un jumbo jet explose au-dessus de la Manche. Au milieu de membres humains éparpillés et d'objets non identifiés, deux silhouettes improbables tombent du ciel : Gibreel Farishta, le légendaire acteur indien, et Saladin Chamcha, l'homme des Mille Voix, self-made man et anglophile devant l'éternel. Agrippés l'un à l'autre, chantant à qui mieux-mieux, ils atterrissent sains et saufs, ô miracle, sur une plage anglaise enneigée...

Gibreel et Saladin ont été choisis (par qui ?) pour être les protagonistes de la lutte éternelle entre le Bien et le Mal. Mais qui est qui ? Les démons peuvent-ils être angéliques ? Les anges sont-ils des diables déguisés ? Tandis que les deux hommes rebondissent du passé au présent et du rêve en aventure, nous sommes spectateurs d'un extraordinaire cycle de contes …

35 editions

Review of 'The Satanic Verses' on 'Storygraph'

4 stars

I listened to a fantastic old audio book version of The Satanic Verses. Somebody digitised it from a series of old cassette tapes and put it on the internet (thank you). I am not sure if it is the voice of Salman Rushdie himself, whoever it is, I would like to thank him so much for this brilliant work. 22 hours of listening pleasure during my walks to and from work. 
I always thought that this was a very serious book. But for most parts it is hilarious. It is also long winding, and I must admit that at some parts I dozed off, simply enjoying the very pleasant sound of the narrator’s voice.

Review of 'The Satanic Verses' on 'Goodreads'

4 stars

A confounding, challenging book that leaves impactful philosophical impressions. This book is so many things: a weird odd-couple story that crosses the planes, a tale of the immigrant experience in England, and a fable about surrender to religion versus a rigorous adherence to secular science. I found the narrative to be lovely, especially the description of Jahilia's marketplaces, the sounds, smells, all those bright images.

Rushdie is working on multiple layers. Jahilia is also the state of ignorance of divine guidance, and it is here that the character Mahound (who is based on Muhammad) is tested. This depiction is one of the largest sources of controversy to this novel, which is supposedly sacrilegious, though it is actually not an attack on Islam or even religion at all. It's a story about life's experiences, and how our perception of the essence of life changes as we change.

Throughout the story, we …