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Midnight’s Children

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Midnight’s Children
Type
Novel
Language
English
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Wikipedia

Midnight's Children is the second novel by Indian-British writer Salman Rushdie, published in 1981 by Jonathan Cape with cover design by Bill Botten, about India's transition from British colonial rule to independence and partition. It is a postcolonial, postmodern and magical realist story told by its chief protagonist, Saleem Sinai, set in the context of historical events. The style of preserving history with fictional accounts is self-reflexive.

Midnight's Children sold over one million copies in the UK alone and won the Booker Prize and James Tait Black Memorial Prize in 1981. It was also awarded the special Booker of Bookers prize in 1993, and the Best of the Booker in 2008, to celebrate the Booker Prize's 25th and 40th anniversaries. In 2003 the novel appeared at number 100 on the BBC's The Big Read poll which determined the UK's "best-loved novels" of all time.

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Annotation

First published: 1981. It won the Booker Prize for Fiction in 1981.

Last modified: 2022-04-15 (revision #91899)

Editions

NameFormatISBNRelease Date
Midnight's ChildrenPaperback?1981
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Wikidata Work ID
Q625764

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Last Modified
2023-03-09