Smile’s - Ismail's corrupt cousin who laid him off in the first place - frighteningly effective fentanyl spray which leaks across both narratives, and CentCorp’s inter-dimensional doorway which offers an escape for characters that are falling apart from an America that is literally disintegrating, echoing what’s happening in our ‘real’ world in this crazy “Age of Anything-Can-Happen”. There’s also sub plots involving wronged sisters, Dr. They're all immigrants adrift in this hyper-real version of Trump's America, a land of racism, where Quichotte is asked where his turban and beard are, and guns, including one that talks.Īs it’s a Rushdie book, Quichotte’s son Sancho (of course) is wished into being during a meteor shower and helped, Pinocchioly, by talking crickets and blue fairies. It turns out that DuChamp is not his real name either, he, like Smile and Selma, hails from Mumbai. But before you can shout “Flann O’Brien!” the story switches to Sam DuChamp, author of ropey spy novels, who is composing Quichotte’s trans-American odyssey, one that mirrors his own situation - both men are estranged from their siblings - the more the novel progresses. This modern Quichotte and his son Sancho travel across America. It is a journey of morality and experience as well as the physical journey. It takes its inspiration from the novel Don Quixote and his journey with his companion, Sancho Panza. Unlike his literary namesake who read too many chivalric romances and ended up one blade short of a windmill, Rushdie’s Mr Quichotte’s – that’s his love letter writing pen name, he’s really out of work pharmaceutical salesman Ismail Smile - cheap television addiction and sudden redundancy prompts a cross-country quest to win the love of film star/chat show host/new Oprah/new Dulcinea Selma R. By contrast, I found almost immediately that Quichotte was a much lighter, and at times, sillier story.
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