Salman Rushdie Quotes About Children

We have collected for you the TOP of Salman Rushdie's best quotes about Children! Here are collected all the quotes about Children starting from the birthday of the Novelist – June 19, 1947! We hope you will be inspired to new achievements with our constantly updated collection of quotes. At the moment, this page contains 20 sayings of Salman Rushdie about Children. We will be happy if you share our collection of quotes with your friends on social networks!
  • If you have children you worry about the world you're leaving them.

    "The Bookers' favourite". Interview with Andrew Anthony, www.theguardian.com. April 5, 2008.
  • One of the things I've thought about 'Midnight's Children' is that it is a novel which puts a Muslim family at the centre of the Indian experience.

  • Games sometimes require lateral thinking. They sometimes require quite skilled hand-eye coordination and so on. But they're not in any sense intelligent in the way that you want your children to develop intelligence to make the mind not just supple, but actually informed.

    Source: bigthink.com
  • Children are the vessels into which adults pour their poison.

    "Midnight's Children". Book by Salman Rushdie, September 7, 2010.
  • ...The lesson [comic books] taught children- or this child, at any rate- was perhaps the unintentionally radical truth that exceptionality was the greatest and most heroic of values; that those who were unlike the crowd were to be treasured the most lovingly; and that this exceptionality was a treasure so great that it had to be concealed, in ordinary life, beneath what the comic books called a 'secret identity'.

  • We all dream things into being; you imagine yourself having a child, and then you have a child. An inventor will think of something in his mind and then make it actual. So things are often passing from the imagined realm into the real world.

  • When 'Midnight's Children' came out, people in the West tended to respond to the fantasy elements in the novel, to praise it in those terms. In India, people read it like a history book.

  • I don't think people cry reading 'Midnight's Children,' but a lot of people seem to cry watching the movie.

  • If my child had prejudice in his head, I'd be ashamed. I would see it as my failure as a parent.

  • One of the things I've learnt is not to depend on there being a woman in your life to make it work. I love my work, I love my children, I've got wonderful friends, you know, I have a nice life.

  • Children like being a little scared, but they don't want to be disturbed.

  • I am on Facebook, but mainly as a way to spy on my children. I find out more about them from their Facebook pages than from what they tell me.

  • My children are English, and both of their mothers were English.

  • It's fun to read things when you don't know all the words. Even children love it... they come up against weird words, and the weird words excite them.

    "When life becomes a bad novel". Salon interview, 1996.
  • To understand just one life you have to swallow the world ... do you wonder, then, that I was a heavy child?

    World  
    "Midnight's Children". Book by Salman Rushdie, 1981.
  • I grew up falling in love with kind of story, amazing, wonder tale of the East, which if you're a child growing up in India is all around you.And I think one of the gifts it gave me as a writer was this early knowledge that stories are not true.

    Source: www.pbs.org
  • I was 21 in 1968, so I'm as much a child of the '60s as is possible to be. In those years the subject of religion had really almost disappeared; the idea that religion was going to be a major force in the life of our societies, in the West anyway, would have seemed absurd in 1968.

  • My first novel - the novel I wrote before 'Midnight's Children' - feels, to me, now, very - I mean, I get embarrassed when I see people reading it. You know, there are some people who, bizarrely, like it. Which I'm, you know, I'm happy for.

    "TalkAsia" with Monita Rajpal, www.cnn.com. February 8, 2013.
  • I discovered that if you find the language to talk to younger readers, children can accept anything.

  • When you have children, your perspective on the parent-child relationship alters.

    "Salman Rushdie: My family values". Interview with Anita Sethi, www.theguardian.com. December 14, 2012.
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