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Viewing: Blog Posts Tagged with: Haroun and the Sea of Stories, Most Recent at Top [Help]
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1. Books at Bedtime: Haroun and the Sea of Stories

As one of the books in our PaperTigers Reading the World Challenge (and I’ll be bringing you a full update on that later on in the week), Younger Brother and I have read together Haroun and the Sea of Stories by Salman Rushdie (Granta Books, 1990). My brother gave a first edition to my boys several years ago but this is the first time we’ve read it – and I see that it is now available in many editions, with a lovely array of book covers, which I can’t resist including here (and see this project book cover/splash page from Art Slug).

But back to the story. We both adored it. I was practically tied down at bedtimes and made to read on. For any child (or adult) who loves words and playing with language and ideas, I can’t recommend it highly enough.

Haroun’s father, the Shah of Blah, has lost his story-telling Gift of the Gab because his wife has left him. Haroun, who has become a little jaded with his father’s focus on fiction himself, soon finds himself in possession of Iff, a Water Genie’s Disconnector and spinning into a spiral of adventures. He discovers that stories are physically real and that the balance of human happiness is being threatened because the menacing land of Chup, where it is always night, is poisoning the Sea of Stories, despite all the attempts to keep it clean by the happy land of Gup across the water, where it is always light…

Haroun meets a wonderful array of characters – as well as Iff, there is Butt, the oxymoronically magical mechanical hoopoe depicted on the book’s cover; Bagha and Goopy, two of the plentimaw fishes who swim in the sea (don’t you just love it?!), Mali the Head Floating Gardener, and many more – and of course, there are also the often shadowy baddies, led by the terrifying Khattam-Shud. Despite all the P2C2E, Processes Too Complicated To Explain (I told you you’d love it!), Haroun finds a way to help his new friends, and in so doing restores the balance of happiness to his own life.

Yes, this is definitely one of the most wonderful readalouds we’ve shared. The prose is like poetry – you almost chew the words. We relished the huge, unanswerable questions that the book explores – what is Reality? What is Story? Who is that character, that person… who am I? – as well as the allegories of light and darkness (which make this so relevant to an adult as well as a young audience), environmental responsibility and empathy. And we revelled in each little bit of wordplay, from character names to gleeful patter.

If your child enjoys stories of worlds within worlds, like Alice in Wonderland, The Wizard of Oz, or the Harry Potter series, they will love Haroun and the Sea of Stories.

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2. My Bookshelf: Haroun and the Sea of Stories


For your reading pleasure, I present Haroun and the Sea of Stories by Salman Rushdie.

Haroun and the Sea of Stories

Fantastical, imaginative and magical. These are the words that come to mind when I think of Haroun and the Sea of Stories.

It is one of the most clever tales I’ve ever read. What makes it so clever? Well, I’m glad you asked. The thing that sets this book apart is the author’s ability to skilfully deconstruct the elements that make up a story such as “Pages of the Royal Guard” (where Pages are both ’servants’ and a pun on the ‘pages’ of a book). It’s an ingenious play on words from beginning to end.

The stunning visuals bring Kahani and, especially, the Ocean of the Streams of Story to life. The fluidity is so captivating that you feel as though you could dip your hand into the Ocean.

Inventive characters such as Iff, the Water Genie, and Butt, the Hoopoe, are a source of guidance and levity during Haroun’s many adventures. They never fail to provide him with the knowledge he needs to succeed.

The brilliance of this book doesn’t end there. Rushdie dares to address such hefty issues as environmental pollution, freedom of speech and the awesome power of a story. All of which he does through the perspective of young Haroun Khalifa.

If you’ve ever wondered “What’s the use of stories that aren’t even true?”, Haroun and the Sea of Stories is your answer.

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