The Satanic Verses
No book in modern times has matched the uproar sparked by Salman Rushdie"s The Satanic Verses, which earned its author a fatwa from Iran"s Ayatollahs decreeing his death. Furore aside, it is a marvellously erudite study of good and evil, a feast of language served up by a writer at the height of his powers and a rollicking comic fable. The book begins with two Indians, Gibreel Farishta ("for fifteen years the biggest star in the history of the Indian movies") and Saladin Chamcha, a Bombay expatriate returning from his first visit to his homeland in 15 years, plummeting from the sky after the explosion of their jetliner, and proceeds through a series of metamorphoses, dreams and revelations. Rushdie"s astonishing powers of invention are at their best in this Whitbread Prize winner.