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- GRAPEVINE, Page 23There Was This Storyteller . . .
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- By DAVID ELLIS/Reported by Sidney Urquhart
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- Next month Salman Rushdie's first book since The Satanic
- Verses will reach U.S. bookstores. The initial printing (125,000
- copies) is large for a children's book, which is what Haroun and
- the Sea of Stories at first appears to be. But hold on. The tale
- seems eerily parallel to Rushdie's predicament. There is a
- storyteller named Rashid Khalifa, also known as the Shah of
- Blah, who loses the gift of the gab and can no longer entertain.
- What's worse, his condition is mysteriously linked to a fanatic
- cult that wants to wipe out not only made-up tales but also
- human speech. Children may take all this as make-believe, but
- adult readers are free to perceive some veiled autobiography,
- plus a wistful prophecy: in the end, the good guys live happily
- ever after.
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