Salman Rushdie was stabbed onstage last year. He's releasing a memoir about the attack

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FILE - Author Salman Rushdie attends the 2023 PEN America Literary Gala Thursday, May 18, 2023, in New York. (AP Photo/Frank Franklin II, File)

NEW YORK ā€“ Salman Rushdie has a memoir coming out about the horrifying attack that left him blind in his right eye and with a damaged left hand. ā€œKnife: Meditations After an Attempted Murderā€ will be published April 16.

ā€œThis was a necessary book for me to write: a way to take charge of what happened, and to answer violence with art,ā€ Rushdie said in a statement released Wednesday by Penguin Random House.

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Last August, Rushdie was stabbed repeatedly in the neck and abdomen by a man who rushed the stage as the author was about to give a lecture in western New York. The attacker, Hadi Matar, has pleaded not guilty to charges of assault and attempted murder.

For some time after Iranā€™s Grand Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini issued a 1989 fatwa calling for Rushdie's death over alleged blasphemy in his novel ā€œThe Satanic Verses,ā€ the writer lived in isolation and with round-the-clock security. But for years since, he had moved about with few restrictions, until the stabbing at the Chautauqua Institution.

The 256-page ā€œKnife" will be published in the U.S. by Random House, the Penguin Random House imprint that earlier this year released his novel ā€œVictory City,ā€ completed before the attack. His other works include the Booker Prize-winning ā€œMidnight's Children,ā€ ā€œShame" and ā€œThe Moor's Last Sigh.ā€ Rushdie is also a prominent advocate for free expression and a former president of PEN America.

ā€œ'Knife' is a searing book, and a reminder of the power of words to make sense of the unthinkable," Penguin Random House CEO Nihar Malaviya said in a statement. ā€œWe are honored to publish it, and amazed at Salmanā€™s determination to tell his story, and to return to the work he loves.ā€

Rushdie, 76, did speak with The New Yorker about his ordeal, telling interviewer David Remnick for a February issue that he had worked hard to avoid ā€œrecrimination and bitternessā€ and was determined to ā€œlook forward and not backwards.ā€

He had also said that he was struggling to write fiction, as he did in the years immediately following the fatwa, and that he might instead write a memoir. Rushdie wrote at length, and in the third person, about the fatwa in his 2012 memoir ā€œJoseph Anton.ā€

ā€œThis doesnā€™t feel third-person-ish to me,ā€ Rushdie said of the 2022 attack in the magazine interview. ā€œI think when somebody sticks a knife into you, thatā€™s a first-person story. Thatā€™s an ā€˜Iā€™ story.ā€


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