other titles...

Salman Rushdie

Knife: Meditations After an Attempted Murder

Hardback book - £20.00 | Buy
From internationally renowned writer and Booker Prize winner Salman Rushdie, a searing, deeply personal account of enduring - and surviving - an attempt on his ...
Salman Rushdie

Victory City

paperback book - £10.99 | Buy
Salman Rushdie

Midnight's Children

VINTAGE QUARTERBOUND CLASSICS edition hardback Book - £18.99 | Buy
Born at the stroke of midnight at the exact moment of India's independence, Saleem Sinai is a special child.
The Wizard of Oz

Salman Rushdie

The Wizard of Oz

Bloomsbury Publishing Plc
  • paperback book

    Released: 1st Aug 2012

    £12.99
    out of stock

The Wizard of Oz 'was my very first literary influence,' writes Salman Rushdie in his account of the great MGM children's classic.

At the age of ten he had written a story, 'Over the Rainbow', about a colourful fantasy world. But for Rushdie The Wizard of Oz is more than a children's film, and more than a fantasy. It's a story whose driving force is the inadequacy of adults, in which 'the weakness of grown-ups forces children to take control of their own destinies'. And Rushdie rejects the conventional view that its fantasy of escape from reality ends with a comforting return to home, sweet home. On the contrary, it is a film that speaks to the exile. The Wizard of Oz shows that imagination can become reality, that there is no such place like home, or rather that the only home is the one we make for ourselves. Rushdie's brilliant insights into a film more often seen than written about are rounded off with his typically scintillating short story, 'At the Auction of the Ruby Slippers,' about the day when Dorothy's red shoes are knocked down to $15,000 at a sale of MGM props. In his foreword to this special edition, published to celebrate the 20th anniversary of the BFI Film Classics series, Rushdie looks back to the circumstances in which he wrote the book, when, in the wake of the controversy surrounding The Satanic Verses and the issue of a fatwa against him, the idea of home and exile held a particular resonance.