Skip to content
PopMatters

PopMatters

Essaying the pop culture that matters since 1999

Primary Menu
  • Features
  • Reviews
  • Lists
  • Music
  • Film
  • TV
  • Books
  • Interviews
  • Picks
  • Donate
  • profile-icon
    • Log In
    • Registration
    • Logout
    • Account

Salman Rushdie

Salman Rushdie’s ‘Two Years Eight Months and Twenty-Eight Nights’ Can’t Tether the Muses
Books/Featured: Top of Home Page/Reviews

Salman Rushdie’s ‘Two Years Eight Months and Twenty-Eight Nights’ Can’t Tether the Muses

By
John Garratt
/ 9 September 2015
All the rowdy little devils from Persitan have settled down here, a bit, but Rushdie's mischievousness will not be tamed.
Events/Featured: Top of Home Page/Reviews

PEN World Voices Fest: What Went Wrong?: 30 April 2011 – New York

By
PopMatters Staff
/ 13 May 2011
Books/Featured: Top of Home Page

Salman Rusdhie on Gods in ‘Luka and the Fire of Life’

By
Peta Jinnath Andersen
/ 2 December 2010
Books/Featured: Top of Home Page/Reviews

The Enchantress of Florence by Salman Rushdie

By
PopMatters Staff
/ 3 August 2008
Featured: Top of Home Page/Film/Reviews

Then She Found Me

By
Cynthia Fuchs
/ 8 May 2008
Books/Featured: Top of Home Page/PopMatters Picks/Reviews

Shalimar the Clown by Salman Rushdie

By
PopMatters Staff
/ 17 October 2005

Follow PopMatters

FacebookTwitterBluesky
SpotifyInstagramThreads

RECENT

  • The Jewish Immigrant Song
  • Chubby Checker’s Unexpected Journey Into Psychedelia
  • Take a Dose of Winterpills and See ‘How We Dance’
  • Naked Eyes’ 1983 Debut Delivers Sincerity in an Ironic World
  • Video Game Storytelling Is a World-Colliding Reinvention
  • Babymetal’s “Elevator Girl” and Echoes of the Elisa Lam Case
  • The Dears Celebrate the Beauty Surrounding Them
  • Sessa Harnesses Soulful Sparks on Gorgeous LP

Follow PopMatters

FacebookTwitterBluesky
SpotifyInstagramThreads

About

  • Masthead
  • Submission Guidelines
  • Mission

Follow Us

  • Facebook
  • X
  • Bluesky
  • Spotify
  • Instagram
  • Threads
© 1999-2025 PopMatters LLC. All rights reserved. PopMatters is wholly independent, women-owned and operated.